Two chimp skulls traffickers jailed in
AbongMbang
Chimp skulls at wildlife office |
Two people have been sentenced by the
AbongMbang Court of First Instance for trafficking in skulls following their
arrest and trail that lasted two months.
The case against the two was called up by
the Abong Court of First Instance on August 9, 2016 and the accused were found
guilty, sentenced to 4 months imprisonment and ordered to pay fines and damages
amounting to over four million CFA francs. The Charges brought against them
included illegal possession, circulation and killing of chimpanzees that is a
totally protected wildlife species. 13
chimpanzee skulls were found in their possession during an operation carried
out on June 8, 2016 by wildlife officials of the Upper Nyong Divisional
Delegation with the support of the Gendarmerie..
After
reading out the sentence, the judge took some time to explain to the convicted
traffickers the meaning of the ruling saying you have been sent to serve a
prison sentence of four months and he equally explained the financial
punishment to them. The two moody-faced convicts stood staring at the judge as
he read out the sentence. One of them wore a white shirt on shorts while the
other had a grey shirt on slim trousers. They had been dragged to court that
morning, handcuffed with other inmates who trekked the short distance that
separated the AbongMbang prison from the court premises
BikomAdjap
Bertrand and MedibeDieudonneSimplice were arrested in AbongMbang after
travelling from Somalomo, a localty close to the Dja Faunal Reserve to sell the chimpanzee skulls
which they had carefully packaged to
avoid detection. The traffickers who were three,- one of them failed to make
the long journey to AbongMbang and so escaped arrest, revealed that the small group ferried
chimpanzee meat regularly from the Somalomo to AbongMbang and as far as the
commercial centre –Yaounde, for sale. This had been going on for a while before
their arrest but the business is illegal and accounts for the decline in
chimpanzee populations in the country.
Chimpanzees
are totally protected wildlife species by the 1994 wildlife law which
stipulates that anyone found in possession of parts of a protected wildlife
species is considered to have killed the animal. The aim is to protect animals
like the chimpanzee that is facing serious problems with poaching as 32
chimpanzee skulls have been seized since the beginning of this year during
operations carried out under the framework of the wildlife law enforcement
initiative started by the Ministry of Forestry and Wildlife (MINFOF) in 2003 to
effectively enforce the laws. MINFOF is working hard to ensure that those
responsible for the slaughter and sale of chimpanzee parts are prosecuted
because their acts infringe the wildlife law.
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