Forums › Life › Environment › MY : Snakes in a bag! (and a turtle)
This slippery wildlife smuggler got busted before he managed to get on the plane..
SEPANG: A man, believed to be international wildlife trader Anson Wong, has been detained at the KL International Airport following the seizure of more than 90 snakes from various species.
It is learnt that the man was in transit from Penang to Jakarta on Thursday when he was detained by Malaysia Airlines staff, who had been alerted after a piece of luggage was reported broken. The snakes were found inside the bag.
According to a government official, 95 of the snakes are believed to be boa constrictors, two are suspected to be rhinoceros vipers and one is believed to be a matamata turtle.
Selangor police chief Datuk Khalid Abu Bakar confirmed that a man named Anson Wong was picked up at 8.50pm on Aug 26, by airport security for allegedly trying to smuggle snakes. He has been remanded until Tuesday.
“We have handed the person over to Perhilitan (Wildlife and Natio*nal Parks Department) for further investigations,” he said.
It had been reported by The Star in February that Wong had been linked to a Dec 15 seizure in the United States of various types of animals from an exotic animal outlet.
Two of the trader’s companies were found to have been supplying animals to the outlet.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Peta) had claimed that CBS Wildlife and Sungai Rusa Wildlife, both owned by Wong, were supplying various types of animals and wildlife to US Global Exotics (USGE).
Wong pleaded guilty to trafficking in wildlife in the US and was sentenced to 71 months’ jail in 2000.
I hope to the flying spaghetti monster that this man DID NOT have a taipan in his luggage, otherwise thing could have ended painfully for him and anyone else in the snakes way
he’s been charged by the environment ministry for smuggling the boas – its worrying that they are now endangered – snakes are normally plentiful in Malaysia so a phenomenal amount must be being smuggled out to satisfy the exotic pet trade and Chinese medicine..
err
@joshd96320 397207 wrote:
“95 of the snakes are believed to be boa constrictors, two are suspected to be rhinoceros vipers and one is believed to be a matamata turtle.”
err
you thought that was weird???
“95 of the snakes are believed to be boa constrictors, two are suspected to be rhinoceros and one is believed to be a matamata turtle.”
i see what you did there daft 😉
the prison sentence might seem steep but wildlife crime can cause even more damage to an already trashed environment of SE Asia.
some species of snake and lizards as well as toads are actually becoming endangered – this causes a big risk of ending up with a infestation of worse bugs/creepy crawlies – snakes, lizards and toads eat all the nastier bugs as well as keep down the numbers of rats and mice (consider that there are 50 different types of mouse in the Phillipines alone)
PS: boas aren’t actually native to Malaysia, pythons are more common – which makes it even more bizzare he’s acquired 95 of them! SE Asian pythons are less popular as pets as they do occasionally eat people, particularly small children, which is usually an undesirable behaviour trait for a companion animal.
Is it humans which have caused these endangered species or are they just naturally dying out?
Most originally lived in the rain forests / jungles which humans have destroyed for their living space. When they get trafficked to Western nations for exotic pets breeding populations are dispersed thus reducing numbers. Some of the creatures are also eaten, particularly by the Chinese.
The Asian Pangolin for instance has been severely depleted in numbers…
Although I have only been to Malaysia twice (in 1978 and 1994), each time I noticed the place was way more built up and there was very little “unspoilt” rural habitat – just about everything had been built on.. This was in the more developed bit of West Malaysia – there still is jungle in the bit next to Indonesia but its getting cleared all the time for timber and also to plant palm trees for biofuels.
@p0ly 399195 wrote:
Is there any need for snakes in the food chain?
Honey badgers eat them 😉
@p0ly 399195 wrote:
Is there any need for snakes in the food chain?
The Chinese eat them. Seriously though, they catch other creatures that create a nuisance and health hazard otherwise and threaten crops. More humans would suffer from a food shortage than are bitten by snakes..
I had a run in with a snake on mushrooms once, i asked to hold my mates massive snake called lizzy (from Malaysia as well GL, my friends family holiday there a bit) it went through the bit in my jeans where the belt goes and got stuck….
a feeling of incredible uncomfortable came over me as i had a snake attached to me!! eeek
thinking about it that was my first ever mushies exp.
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Forums › Life › Environment › MY : Snakes in a bag! (and a turtle)