Odisha police launches drive to bust pangolin smuggling racket

Press Trust of India  |  Bhubaneswar 

A special unit of the Police has launched a drive to bust an international syndicate that peddles "endangered" pangolin, one of the world's most illegally traded mammals, a top said today.

MLAT is an agreement between nations to exchange information or provide legal assistance for enforcing laws.

Stating that an smuggles pangolin for its scales, said some of the racketeers have been arrested recently.

"As the members of the network also operate from neighbouring countries such as Myanmar, we are making an effort to get hold of them by exploring the MLAT provisions. The matter is being forwarded to the Ministry of Home Affairs, which could then approach the government for necessary assistance," the DGP asserted.

The move to bust the global racket has gained pace after six persons, who were involved in smuggling pangolin scales from Odisha, and to and China, were arrested earlier this year.

Himanshu Lal, the DIG of the (STF) of state Crime Branch, said the key players in have been arrested, while those operating from and are yet to be nabbed.

The STF is planning to approach the to bust the international network of pangolin smuggling, for which adequate preparations are being made at present, he said.

Stressing that pangolin poaching is rampant in districts like Kandhamal, Nayagarh, Ganjam, Kalahandi, Boudh and Rayagada, Lal said the "main consumer" of Pangolin scales happens to be China, where they have a huge demand for medicinal purposes.

"It seems that illegal pangolin trade has grown considerably in over the years. The animal scales are usually smuggled by road and trains to via north-eastern states," he added.

Several important facts about the illegal trade have come to light following the interrogation of two persons who were arrested from Daspalla area of district last month, a said, adding the duo were collecting scales from poachers in Odisha as well as other states such as Chhattisgarh, and

Biswajit Mohanty, a member of Wildlife Society of Orissa, said the Ganjam-Nayagarh-Kandhamal belt of Odisha has become a hub of illegal pangolin trade in the recent years.

"During monsoons, teams of smugglers from outside visit the area to procure scales of the animal," the wildlife expert said.

Noting that the illegal trade is lucrative as it ensures huge profits, he said the law enforcement agencies and the forest officials must take immediate steps to check poaching of the

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First Published: Sun, July 22 2018. 13:25 IST