logo
Thailand arrests man for smuggling baby orangutans

Thailand arrests man for smuggling baby orangutans

Thai police have arrested a man suspected of smuggling two baby orangutans into the kingdom, they said on Thursday, in a case linked to an international wildlife trafficking network.
Advertisement
The 47-year-old suspect was detained on Wednesday evening at a petrol station in a residential district of Bangkok while preparing to hand over the animals to a customer, police said in a statement.
Two infant orangutans – one about a year old, the other just one month – were found in a plastic basket wearing diapers, with a feeding bottle beside them, according to photos released by police.
The arrest followed a joint investigation with the US Fish and Wildlife Service and United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
Orangutans, native to Borneo and Sumatra, are classified as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List and protected under the Cites treaty, and are among the most trafficked primates in the world.
Advertisement
Thai police said the apes were believed to have been sold for around 300,000 baht each (US$8,900).

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Malaysia seeks to freeze US$178 million in London assets tied to Daim Zainuddin's widow
Malaysia seeks to freeze US$178 million in London assets tied to Daim Zainuddin's widow

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • South China Morning Post

Malaysia seeks to freeze US$178 million in London assets tied to Daim Zainuddin's widow

Malaysia has launched efforts to freeze assets in London – including bank accounts and prime real estate valued at £132 million (US$178 million) – linked to the widow of the late tycoon Daim Zainuddin , according to anti-graft authorities. The process – which will ultimately need to be executed by authorities in the United Kingdom – is part of a widening embezzlement probe into his family's wealth. Daim, who died last November aged 86, was a key ally of former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad and played a central role in driving Malaysia's economic boom in the 1980s – a period critics say was marked by widespread crony capitalism that benefited Mahathir's inner circle. He was charged alongside his wife, Naimah Khalid, in January 2024 for failure to declare assets – allegations the couple dismissed as a politically motivated attack driven by Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim , a long-time rival of Mahathir. Former Malaysian finance minister Daim Zainuddin arrives at court in Kuala Lumpur on January 29, 2024, to face charges of failing to declare assets under the MACC Act. Photo: EPA-EFE The charges against Daim were dropped following his death, but the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) is continuing to probe the assets of his wife and sons.

‘Mark him for life': Singapore teen's parents want Ian Fang caned for sexual offences
‘Mark him for life': Singapore teen's parents want Ian Fang caned for sexual offences

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • South China Morning Post

‘Mark him for life': Singapore teen's parents want Ian Fang caned for sexual offences

The parents of a teenage girl in Singapore have called for stronger punishment for former actor Ian Fang, after he was convicted of having underage sex with their daughter. Fang, 35, was sentenced to 40 months' jail on May 19 after pleading guilty to sexual offences involving a minor. He did not face caning for the sexual offences he committed against the then 15-year-old girl. The victim's parents, however, have called for Fang to be caned. 'Mark him for life. He marked my daughter for life,' the girl's father told national broadcaster CNA. 'Let the guy learn. Like that, every time he takes off his clothes, people can see … he did something bad in the past.' The couple also said they intended to sue Fang. In June last year, Fang engaged in mostly unprotected sex with the victim on nine occasions, despite knowing that she was underage. He was 34 at the time of the offences, and worked as an acting teacher at a modelling school for students aged four to 14.

Hong Kong helps seize more than HK$157 million in cross-border online scam operation
Hong Kong helps seize more than HK$157 million in cross-border online scam operation

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong helps seize more than HK$157 million in cross-border online scam operation

Hong Kong and six other Asian jurisdictions, including Singapore and Thailand, have intercepted more than HK$157 million (US$20 million) and made more than 1,800 arrests in the first joint crackdown on online scams using a cross-border direct communication platform for law enforcement. Advertisement Ernest Wong Chun-yu, chief superintendent of Hong Kong police's commercial crime bureau, announced on Tuesday that seven law enforcement agencies across East and Southeast Asia conducted a joint operation between April 28 and May 28 under a direct communication and information-sharing platform called Frontier+. 'We are racing against time, because the money can disappear very quickly … this platform provides a very useful communication platform, so we can communicate with one another quickly,' he said. As part of the joint operation, police agencies in Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand, Malaysia, the Maldives and Macau investigated 9,268 reports. They seized US$19.4 million in suspected criminal proceeds, froze more than 32,000 bank accounts and arrested 1,858 individuals aged between 14 and 81. These jurisdictions, alongside Australia, Canada and Indonesia, were part of a cross-border platform called Frontier+, which was formed last October. Advertisement Anti-scam units of the participating police forces could directly communicate with one another to handle suspected crime proceeds and victims of transnational swindles, as well as share intelligence and scam trends. Details of the operation and the cross-border platform were revealed at a joint press conference, attended by police representatives from Singapore, Thailand, South Korea and Macau.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store