Tanzania to receive smuggled chameleons seized in Austria
Tanzanian authorities said that they had set in motion a process of bringing back smuggled chameleons that were seized in Austria in January.
Allan Kijazi, the deputy permanent secretary in the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism, said the government had started applying permits from the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) to bring back the chameleons.
“CITES is mandated to allow us to bring back the chameleons.
“Hopefully the permits will be released soon,” Kijazi told Xinhua in a telephone interview.
The official added that two Tanzanians had been arrested by police in connection with smuggling of chameleons into Austria as investigations continued.
“Local police in collaboration with the International Criminal Police Organisation is still hunting down a syndicate of criminals that was involved in the smuggling of the chameleons,” said Kizaji.
On Jan. 26, the director of wildlife in the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism, Maurus Msuha, said the government had launched investigations to establish how 74 protected chameleons from the East African nation were smuggled to Austria.
The investigations followed reports that the protected chameleons, which are from the Usambara Mountains in Tanzania, were seized in Austria.
According to local media reports, Austrian authorities stopped a man at Vienna airport as he tried to smuggle the protected chameleons from Tanzania into the country.
The reports said the 56-year-old man, who was not further identified, had hidden the animals in socks and boxes when he was caught at the customs checkpoint in Vienna.
He had traveled to Austria from Tanzania via Ethiopia.
Environews.com