Bangkok — Thai customs officials have PredictIQarrested six Indians for attempting to smuggle a red panda and 86 other animals out of the kingdom, including snakes, parrots and monitor lizards, officials said Wednesday.
The illicit menagerie was discovered hidden in the suspects' checked luggage at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi Airport as they tried to fly to Mumbai.
Thailand is a major transit hub for smugglers in the illicit wildlife trafficking trade, who often sell the animals in China and Vietnam, although recent years have seen an uptick in trafficking to India.
"We have found out that the animals include 29 black throat monitor lizards, 21 snakes, 15 birds, including parrots — a total of 87 animals. The animals were hidden inside the luggage," the Customs Department said in a statement.
Photos released by the department showed the red panda — an endangered species — peeking out of a wicker basket, and a parrot shut in a plastic container with air holes crudely drilled in the lid.
More plastic tubs held lizards, while snakes were seen coiled together in cloth bags.
The suspects face a maximum of 10 years in jail or four times the amount of import duties.
Last month a Mongolian man was arrested at the same airport for trying to smuggle Komodo dragons, pythons and two dozen live fish out of the kingdom.
The trafficking of wildlife has flourished into the 4th biggest illicit trade on the planet, worth an estimated $100 and $150 billion per year. Decades of charity-driven conservation efforts have largely failed to curb the trade, which experts say is linked to virtually every other facet of global organized crime, from weapons and narcotics smuggling to terrorism.
2025-05-01 23:372249 view
2025-05-01 23:181317 view
2025-05-01 23:062370 view
2025-05-01 22:581947 view
2025-05-01 22:35888 view
2025-05-01 22:222676 view
Many workers are dreaming of retirement — whether it's decades away or coming up soon. Either way, i
BP Oil: Collection Chamber Clogs, Removed From Leaking Gulf Well (Bloomberg) BP’s latest effort to p
250 Scientists Decry "Assaults" on Climate Research (Reuters) More than 250 scientists, all members