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Kenyan court fines four, including Belgian teens, for trying to smuggle protected ants

Kenyan court fines four, including Belgian teens, for trying to smuggle protected ants

NAIROBI: A Kenyan court on Wednesday fined four people, including two Belgian teenagers, more than US$7,000 for attempting to smuggle thousands of live ants out of the country.
The case has received considerable attention after the Kenyan Wildlife Service (KWS) accused the four of engaging in "bio-piracy".
David Lornoy and Seppe Lodewijckx, both 18 of Belgium, Duh Hung Nguyen of Vietnam, and Dennis Nganga of Kenya all pleaded guilty to possession of the ants, but denied seeking to traffic them.
Lornoy and Lodewijckx were arrested in possession of 5,000 queen ants packed in 2,244 tubes in Nakuru County, around 160 kilometres (100 miles) from the capital Nairobi.
Duh and Nganga were found with ants stored in 140 syringes packed with cotton wool and two containers, according to a charge sheet seen by AFP.
The senior magistrate, Njeri Thuku, made a reference to the slave trade while passing judgement.
"Imagine being violently removed from your home and packed into a container with many others like you. Then imagine being isolated and squeezed into a tiny space where the only source of nourishment for the foreseeable future is glucose water," she wrote.
"It almost sounds as if the reference above is to slave trade. Yet, it is not slave trade, but it is illegal wildlife trade."
Lornoy was described as an "ant enthusiast" who kept colonies at home in Belgium and was member of a Facebook group called "Ants and Ant Keeping", according to the sentencing report.
He told investigators he was not aware that transporting the ants was illegal.
Police had put the value of the ants taken by the Belgians at one million shillings (US$7,740).
The haul included the rare Messor cephalotes species, a single queen ant that currently sells for at least US$99 each, according to the court report.
Possession of any wildlife specimen or trophy without a permit is a criminal offence in Kenya, with suspects normally subject to a fine of up to $10,000 and five years or more in prison.
The court ultimately sentenced all four to a fine of one million shillings (US$7,740), or a year in prison if they failed to pay.
The court said Lornoy and Lodewijckx "do not come across as typical poachers" and were ignorant of the law.
But it said the case reflected a script "that has been played out before in centuries gone by... of Africa having resources that are plundered by the West and now the East".
The KWS said their action was not only a "wildlife crime but also constitutes bio-piracy".

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