Ivory trafficker arrested in Yoko |
A trafficker was arrested on Wednesday July
5, 2017 in Yoko in the Centre region as he attempted to sell two ivory tusks.
Wildlife officials from the Centre Regional Delegation of Forestry and Wildlife
travelled over 300 km to the town located in the Mbam and Kim Division of the
Centre Region to carry out the operation that involved close collaboration with
the police and LAGA, a wildlife law enforcement NGO that provided technical
support.
The
suspect arrived on a bike clutching the bag, where the ivory tusks were stored,
close to his back. He had cut the tusks into four pieces weighing 18kg for easy
transportation on the motocycle. Wildlife officials who were simply waiting for
his arrival quickly swooped in, seizing
the bag and getting him handcuffed immediately. The experienced trafficker
seemed to have understood his time was up and tried some diversionary tactics
in lame attempts to flee. He then resisted being put into the car that
immediately travelled to Ntui from Yoko, considered to be a difficult area for
wildlife law enforcement operations.
Several
attempts at arresting wildlife traffickers in this area have met with dismal
failure because of complicity and corruption going on among some officials and
wildlife traffickers. This is not the first attempt at arresting this
particular trafficker. He narrowly escaped arrest last year in the same town
and it is believed by those who worked on the operation that information was
leaked by local officials. Explaining why the team had to leave from Yaounde, the Controller No. 3 at the regional
delegation Ngnondete John who was head
of the team said “It is to avoid leakage
of information because generally in Yoko information is not well kept. When
information is not well kept as it is the case, {law enforcement} missions
fail”
The
difficulties doing law enforcement operations in the town has given it a very
poor reputation within conservation circles as trafficking is done with
impunity and some officials seem to be involved. The news of the arrest was received
with satisfaction among conservationists and wildlife officials in Yaounde.
Many expressed hope that this is the beginning of a new wave of law enforcement
operations in the area that is flooded with traffickers and poachers of several
protected wildlife species.
The
illegal trade in ivory is said to be causing the calamitous decline in elephant
populations. Traffickers keep teams of poachers who do the work of shooting and
cutting off the ivory from the elephants. The trafficker arrested in Yoko was
no different. He had a team of poachers to whom he supplied food, bullets and
other poaching accessories, according to preliminary investigations. The
investigations also revealed that he did business with a Douala-based trafficker who made regularly
trips to meet him.
Hours
after the Yoke operation, a total of 7.2 tons of ivory was seized in Hong Kong,
by customs that arrested three people –
a man and two women. A container declared to be transporting frozen fish was
found to be loaded with ivory. Cartons of fish were removed to uncover ivory
beneath. Trafficking of this magnitude
starts with ivory transactions as the one in Yoko.
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