Poaching has surged in the last few years across sub-Saharan Africa,
where gangs kill elephants and rhinos to feed Asian demand for ivory
and horns for use in traditional medicines.
Wildlife authority Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) officers and police
confiscated the ivory in a raid at a warehouse in the port city of
Mombasa, KWS said in a statement.
“The ivory was ... was being prepared for loading and export to a
destination we are yet to establish," Nelson Marwa, Mombasa County
commissioner, told journalists in Mombasa. "Our officers had to
break into the store to access them.”
A Reuters reporter at the scene said the tusks were being packed in
sacks made of nylon and sisal.
Police arrested one suspect and were searching for another who
escaped, Marwa said, noting that the suspect in custody tried to
bribe police officers by offering them 5 million shillings
($57,100).
Arthur Tuda, KWS officer in charge of the coastal region, said some
of the ivory could have come from as far away as the Democratic
Republic of Congo.
“From the coloration of the tusks, we can estimate that the ivory is
from different sources," he said, saying some appeared to be from
elephants from Kenya's savannah and others from Congolese forests.
Kenya has imposed stiffer penalties - longer jail terms and bigger
fines - for wildlife poaching or trafficking, saying poaching is
harming tourism, a major earner of foreign exchange.
KWS said in March that Kenya poachers have killed 18 rhinos and 51
elephants this year. In 2013, 59 rhinos and 302 elephants were
killed, compared with 30 rhinos and 384 elephants in 2012.
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Kenyan officers seized 13.5 tonnes of ivory in Mombasa last year,
mostly originating in other countries in the region. At least 249
suspects have so far been arrested this year and prosecuted for
various wildlife offences, KWS said.
In January, a Kenyan court convicted a Chinese man of smuggling
ivory and ordered him to pay a fine of 20 million shillings
($233,000) or serve seven years in jail, the first sentencing since
Kenya introduced the new anti-poaching law.
($1 = 87.5000 Kenyan shillings)
(Writing by George Obulutsa; Editing by Edmund Blair and Louise
Ireland)
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