Crackdown on illegal wildlife trade

Crackdown on illegal wildlife trade
by -
Mizzima
A male pangolin in its enclosure at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Center in Takeo province, Cambodia, 20 February 2016. Photo: Mak Remissa/EPA
A male pangolin in its enclosure at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Center in Takeo province, Cambodia, 20 February 2016. Photo: Mak Remissa/EPA

Smuggling of illegal wildlife to foreign countries will be closely monitored and strictly controlled to prevent wild animals from extinction, state media reported on 24 July quoting an official from the Ministry of Resource and Environmental Conservation.

The forestry department is gathering data about smuggling of wild animals and their parts in border areas with the assistance of international non-governmental organizations Wildlife Conservation Society and World Wide Fund. Check-ups are being conducted in border channels. Ivory, snakes, tortoises and pangolins are among the most common things being smuggled, the report said.

Those who are in possession of, trafficking, transporting and exporting wildlife will be either fined Ks50,000 or given a seven-year prison sentence.

More news from Mizzima
January 30, 2026
The National Unity Government (NUG), along with major ethnic revolutionary organizations (EROs...
68 Karenni prisoners who escaped from Mae Sae Prison were handed over to Myanmar by the Thai military on January 26 at the Myawaddy-Mae Sot Friendship Bridge No. (2).
January 29, 2026
The Thai Army has repatriated 68 inmates who escaped from a resistance-run prison in Karenni...
January 28, 2026
Myanmar’s military-organised elections fail to meet basic international legal standards and...
January 27, 2026
A military junta paramotor crashed under mysterious circumstances near Defense Equipment Factory...