Officials seize pangolins worth $190,000, say endangered animal’s scales might’ve been used to make meth

Photo illustration: Tree pangolin / Wikimedia Commons
Photo illustration: Tree pangolin / Wikimedia Commons

Indonesian authorities have seized hundreds of critically endangered pangolins and scales in a haul worth $190,000 after uncovering a major smuggling operation, an official said Wednesday.

Two men were also arrested after Navy officers raided a warehouse near a port on Sumatra island late Tuesday, acting on a tip-off that it was being used to store the creatures which are also known as “scaly anteaters”.

They discovered 223 live pangolins, 24 of the creatures which were already dead and frozen as well as nine large bags of pangolin scales, local Navy spokesman Sahala Sinaga told AFP.

He said the total haul seized near the city of Medan, which was going to be sent to neighboring Malaysia, was worth an estimated 2.5 billion rupiah (about $190,000).

It was further evidence that trade in the world’s most heavily trafficked mammal remains a major problem despite concerted efforts to clamp down.

Last year, the reclusive, gentle mammal received the highest level of protection against illegal trade at a global conference in South Africa.

Sinaga said the detained men, both 43, were suspected of being small players in a larger syndicate. They could face up to five years in jail and a fine of 100 million rupiah if found guilty of breaking wildlife protection laws.

“They claimed the pangolins would be shipped to Malaysia,” said Sinaga, adding the scales could have been intended for use in the production of crystal methamphetamine.

Pangolin scales are sometimes used in the production of the illegal drug. The creature’s meat is also prized as an edible delicacy and its body parts as an ingredient in traditional medicine in parts of Asia — particularly China — and Africa

It was just the latest case of pangolins being seized from alleged smugglers in Indonesia — in August last year authorities found more than 650 pangolins hidden in freezers on the main island of Java and arrested a suspect.

Protection group the International Union for Conservation of Nature classifies the pangolins found in Indonesia as critically endangered.

Pangolins, which have bad vision but a good sense of smell and hearing, are covered in tough, overlapping scales, and eat ants using pink, sticky tongues almost as long as their bodies.



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