Posted on 04/08/2020 6:08:30 PM PDT by nickcarraway
A 45-year-old man was jailed for 17 months on Wednesday (April 8) after he was caught smuggling 22kg of white rhinoceros horns worth an estimated US$563,000 (S$804,000) at Singapores Changi Airport without a permit.
In a statement issued after the sentence was handed down, the National Parks Board said the penalty was "the heaviest sentence meted out for the smuggling of wildlife parts in Singapore" to date.
The court heard that the horns had been removed from at least five adult white rhinoceros a species that is threatened with extinction according to an international convention the court heard.
Thurman Shiraazudin Aiden Matthews, a citizen of South Africa, was arrested on Jan 5 this year while he was in transit at Changi Airport Terminal 2; he was on his way from Johannesburg in South Africa to Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam.
The unemployed man then admitted that he was hired by a Chinese man who offered him the opportunity to earn some easy money transporting wildlife products such as rhino horns or lion bones to Vietnam in October 2019.
At the time, he was still on parole after his release from a prison in South Africa. National Parks Board prosecutor Wendy Tan said she was told by South African authorities that he had been jailed before for shoplifting, theft, burglary and housebreaking offences.
Read also: Report on 'jaw dropping' levels of wildlife trafficking in SE Asia urges Spore to enact harsher penalties
But as he was desperate for money, he agreed to be part of the illegal trade and was then introduced to two Chinese ladies who coordinated the transaction and passed him two suitcases containing 11 pieces of cut horn.
If he succeeded in delivering them to Vietnam, he was promised a payment of 20,000 South African rand (about S$2,000).
According to the organisation Save the Rhino, rhino poaching has escalated in recent years and is being driven by the demand for rhino horn in Asian countries, particularly Vietnam.
Rhino horns are used in traditional Chinese medicine, but are increasingly seen as a symbol of success and wealth, it added.
On Wednesday, Thurman pleaded guilty to one charge under the Endangered Species (Import and Export) Act.
To familiarise himself with the route, Thurman had even travelled to Vietnam from Johannesburg transiting through Singapore thrice without carrying any illegal items.
But when he arrived at Changi Airport after putting the plan into action, at about 7.40am on Jan 5, a baggage screening officer attached to the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority facility noticed that the two suitcases contained several items shaped like horns.
Thurman was then identified as the owner of the suitcases and escorted to a room where he was instructed to open the suitcases, which were wrapped in plastic cling wrap and locked.
The 11 pieces of cut horn found were then taken to the Singapore Zoo for analysis, and the institution confirmed that they were from rhinoceroses.
NParks Centre for Animal and Veterinary Sciences also analysed the horns and its preliminary findings were that they were from the white rhino (Ceratotherium simum) species.
In asking the court to impose a jail sentence of less than 15 months on Wednesday, Thurmans lawyer, Mr Sunil Sudheesan, told the court that his client is a mere courier who was in control of the suitcases for around half an hour or less.
In urging the court to not place too much weight on imposing a deterrent sentence which the prosecutor had sought when arguing for a 20-month jail sentence he added: People at the lowest rung of these operations, frankly, dont get deterred no matter what sentence we (impose) because they dont know any better.
District Judge Adam Nakhoda decided on a 17-month jail sentence as he considered the number of rhinoceroses harmed for the loot as the most important factor during sentencing.
The white rhinoceros is listed under Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (Cites), which is an international convention. Species listed in Appendix I are threatened with extinction.
For committing the offence under the Endangered Species (Import and Export) Act, Thurman could have been jailed for up to two years, fined, or both. Read more at https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/man-jailed-17-months-after-he-was-caught-transit-changi-airport-trying-smuggle-rhino-horns
Surprised it wasn’t the standard 7am hanging in Changi prison.
A few years ago,while visiting Kenyan national parks,we had a chance to talk to our guide,James,during the long drives from place to place.He spoke at length about poaching and the fact that it’s a big problem in Kenya.He told us that the official position of Kenyan government officials (and park officials) is “shoot to kill”.They don’t try to scare poachers off...or take them prisoner...it’s shoot to kill.
They already killed off nearly all Asian rhinos, now they get them from Africa.
The first time I saw that I almost soiled myself...and all I was carrying were blood pressure meds!
So its ok to do this if he had a permit?
Don’t tell me: They use it to treat E.D.
Here’s an idea. Employ the poachers to keep the rhinos alive. First, establish how many rhinos are in a given area. Second, pay them for every rhino alive at the end of the year. Give them authority to stop poachers by any means necessary.
They ought to cut his nose off, and being Singapore, I shouldn’t think that completely out of the question. He at least deserves stripes.
it’s keratin right? it’s fingernails.
Meanwhile, citizens of Hong Kong, Viagra exists!
Sorry, Singapore that is.
Good.
He shoild have had his human horn removed.
The animal kingdom should take care of these atrocities with our help. Let it be known that if you are caught you will be placed in a controlled environment of hyenas and African wild dogs who will have there way with you
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