Indonesia foils bid to smuggle baby turtles to China

The turtles, worth an estimated $90,000, were concealed among clown loach fish, which can be legally exported from Indonesia.

Update: 2016-02-23 10:40 GMT
Baby turtles being released into the sea at Panga beach of Aceh Jaya, in Aceh province. (Photo: AFP)

Jakarta: Indonesian authorities have foiled an attempt to smuggle more than 4,000 protected baby turtles worth tens of thousands of dollars to China, customs officials said on Tuesday.

More than 3,700 pig-nosed turtles and nearly 900 snake-necked turtles were found at the weekend, hidden in containers in a building on the outskirts of the capital Jakarta.

"Customs officials succeeded in foiling an attempt to smuggle turtles," said a statement from Jakarta airport customs office. The turtles were reportedly due to be sent through the airport and airport customs officials succeeded in stopping the smuggling bid.

The turtles, worth an estimated $90,000, were concealed among clown loach fish, which can be legally exported from Indonesia.

The reptiles were destined to be flown to Guangzhou, southern China, said the statement.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature classifies the pig-nosed turtle as vulnerable and the snake-necked turtle as critically endangered, and says both species are popular as pets.

Some turtle species are also popular in China as exotic food or for use in traditional medicine.

Indonesia, a tropical archipelago of more than 17,000 islands, is home to a kaleidoscope of exotic animals and plants, but the illegal trade in wildlife is rampant and laws aimed at providing protection are often poorly enforced.

Numerous endangered species, from the Sumatran elephant to the Javan rhino, have been driven to the brink of extinction, with poachers targeting them for their body parts for use in traditional medicine.

Orangutans have also seen their habitats destroyed due to rapid expansion of palm oil plantations.

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