Off the wire
Death penalty reinstatement to rule out Turkey's EU membership: Austrian chancellor  • News Analysis: Trump could win White House if turning election into referendum on Clinton: experts  • Roundup: European commissioner urges for Greek debt relief deal by year end  • Iran rejects UN report on nuclear deal implementation as "imbalanced, biased"  • 1st LD Writethru: Probing shows Nice attacker's "recent interest" to radical movement, but no evidence of links to IS  • UN chief calls for volunteer work for a better world  • Lithuania unprepared for extreme situations: report  • Ghana central bank holds policy rate at 26 pct  • Astronomers discover over 100 new alien planets  • British FTSE 100 rises 0.39 pct on Monday  
You are here:   Home

Madagascar police seize 260 baby turtles

Xinhua, July 19, 2016 Adjust font size:

Madagascar police seized 260 baby turtles ready to be sent illicitly to Bangkok at the international airport of Ivato on Monday.

"Madagascar's police of air and borders (PAF) seized 260 radiata baby turtles at Ivato International Airport," the Chief of PAF, Commissaire Rufin Lebiria, told Xinhua by telephone.

"Two suitcases each containing 130 turtles, owned to a 41-year Malagasy citizen, were found out at the scanner by our elements this morning, during a normal checking at the airport," Lebiria said.

Lebiria explained that the 260 baby turtles were alive during their capture and were transferred to the Ministry of Environment. "Investigation on this illegal traffic was opened immediately," he said.

"The trafficker was a businessman. He planned to take a flight to Bangkok with Turkish Airlines when his illegal act was caught by the police," Lebiria added.

"Two weeks ago, the police already caught 119 other baby turtles at the same airport," Lebiria disclosed.

The sale of Madagascar turtles is strictly forbidden because they are classified in the category of endangered species on the Red List of International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and are listed in Annex of the Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species (CITES) Endit