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German customs officials find 1,500 tarantulas hidden in cake boxes

German customs officials find 1,500 tarantulas hidden in cake boxes

Euronews14-07-2025
Customs officials in Germany released photos on Monday from a seizure of roughly 1,500 young tarantulas found inside plastic containers that had been hidden in chocolate sponge cake boxes shipped to an airport in the west of the country.
Customs officials found the shipment at Cologne Bonn airport in a package that had arrived from Vietnam, tipped off by a "noticeable smell" that didn't resemble the expected aroma of the seven kilograms of the confectionery treats, Cologne customs office spokesman Jens Ahland said.
"My colleagues at the airport are regularly surprised by the contents of prohibited packages from all over the world, but the fact that they found around 1,500 small plastic containers containing young tarantulas in this package left even the most experienced among them speechless," Ahland said in a statement.
Ahland hailed an "extraordinary seizure," but one that "saddens us to see what some people do to animals purely for profit."
Many of the eight-legged creatures didn't survive the trip, in a suspected violation of German animal-welfare rules, while survivors were given to the care of an expert handler, the office said.
Reached by phone, Ahland said that the estimated value of the shipment was being assessed.
Criminal proceedings are underway against the intended recipient in the Sauerland region, east of the airport, in part for alleged violations of failure to pay the proper import duties and make the proper customs declarations, the office said.
The tarantulas were discovered about three weeks ago, but the customs office only made the images public on Monday.
Insect smuggling into Europe for profit is not unusual. In May, two teens were sentenced by a Kenyan court after being found with 5,000 ants in their guesthouse.
The court sentenced them to either a fine of $7,700 (€6,775) or the option of serving 12 months in prison.
The Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) said that case represented "a shift in trafficking trends — from iconic large mammals to lesser-known yet ecologically critical species."
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