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| A record 26 tonnes of shark fin were seized by customs officers in Hong Kong (AFP Photo/Handout) |
Hong Kong has seized 26 tonnes of smuggled shark fins, sliced from some 38,500 endangered animals, in the largest bust of its kind in the southern Chinese city.
The record
haul was discovered in two containers from Ecuador, and highlights the
continued demand for shark fin, which is served at wedding banquets in many
Chinese communities.
The city's
customs department unveiled the haul on Wednesday and said it smashed previous
records.
"Each
consignment consisting of 13 tonnes broke the previous record seizure of 3.8
tonnes of controlled shark fins made in 2019," customs official Danny
Cheung told reporters.
Most of the
fins came from thresher and silky sharks, both endangered species. A
57-year-old man was arrested but has been released on bail pending further
enquiries.
Some of the
ocean's most vital apex predators, shark populations have been decimated over
the last few decades with finning and industrial long line fishing the main
culprits.
Fishing
fleets often cut the fin from the shark and then and throw the fatally maimed
animal back in the sea to maximise profit.
The dried
fins sell for considerable sums and are usually served in a glutinous soup at
banquets.
The sale
and consumption of shark fin is not illegal in Hong Kong, but must be licensed.
Years of
campaigning by environmentalists and celebrities like Chinese basketball star
Yao Ming have led to the dish becoming less fashionable among younger consumers
in China, Macau, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
But it
remains stubbornly popular among older generations and many prominent hotels
and restaurants still offer it.
A 2018
survey by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) found seven out of 10 Hong Kongers had
eaten shark fin that year.
"There
is still strong cultural value placed on consuming shark fin, particularly at
weddings, business events and family gatherings like the upcoming Mother's
Day," senior conservation officer Gloria Lai Pui-yin told AFP.
Some
restaurants and hotels had signed WWF's "no shark fin" pledge but
many continued to offer the dish, she added.
Wild Aid
estimates some 73 million sharks are killed every year for the trade.
Their
research says consumption has dropped significantly on the Chinese mainland but
there is growing appetite for the dish in Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia.
With its
busy port and international connections, Hong Kong has long been a major
trafficking route for wildlife and drug smugglers.
Importing
endangered species without a licence is illegal and carries a maximum penalty
of 10 years in jail and a HK$10 million ($1.3 million) fine.

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