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Fake
tiger parts found
By
Teh Jen Lee
GET dry bones from a dog's leg and glue on stringy tendons.
Wrap it with goat skin and fur that has been dyed orange with black
stripes.
Finally, attach 'claws' made of carved cow horn and voila, you have a
tiger paw.
Want a tiger penis?
Get a cow's leg tendons, fashion a testicle-like bag out of it and trim
the coiled end to produce 'barbs'.
We're not talking about the work of museum taxidermists here.
Rather, the people who will go to such lengths to create fake tiger
parts and allegedly trying to sell them.
That's what the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) found when it
raided traditional medicine shops following The New Paper's expose last
October. Posing as interested buyers, we got three shopkeepers in
Chinatown to show us bones, penises and paws which they claimed were from
tigers.
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Since 1986, it has been illegal to import and export tigers under the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species in Wild Flora and
Fauna (Cites).
SALE AND DISPLAY BANNED
Singapore also banned the sale and display of tiger parts in 1994.
Ms Lye Fong Keng, head of AVA's wildlife regulatory branch, said shops
in Bugis Village, Chinatown, South Bridge Road and Temple Street were
raided.
The police also nabbed two Indian nationals who claimed to be selling
tiger parts, including two tiger skins.
Out of 20 shops, six were found to be selling fake tiger parts.
'AVA confiscated 18 penises, 12 limb bones and three paws. The shops
claimed these were from tigers but the story changed when AVA officers
revealed their identity.
'They then said the parts were brought in by an Indonesian man who
supplies them with fake parts. Each fake tiger penis is sold for $100 to
$250,' said Ms Lye.
Visual examinations of the parts were done by Cites officers, two zoo
vets and Mr Chris Shepherd of Traffic South-east Asia, a wildlife trade
monitoring network based in Kuala Lumpur.
The experts confirmed that the confiscated specimens were not
genuine.
The bones had to be looked at carefully as it is quite challenging to
identify where they came from.
When there's a need to confirm the species of a bone, AVA's veterinary
public health laboratory can do this using DNA testing.
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The 'tiger skins' seized were also found to be fake as the colours were
fading.
AVA has referred these cases to the police as cheating cases.
Mr Shepherd commended AVA on its efforts to control any possible tiger
parts trade here.
He advised people to check the ingredients of medicines to ensure they
are not buying anything that may contain protected wildlife parts. And if
they see shops claiming to sell protected wildlife parts, they should
immediately report it to AVA.
On its part, AVA will continue to conduct surprise checks on these
shops to ensure they do not sell tiger parts, be they real or fake.
AVA officers also meet traditional Chinese medicine associations to
educate and remind them not to trade in endangered species.
Ms Lye said: 'Real tiger parts such as penises are taken as love
potions or aphrodisiacs but there has been no scientific proof. We educate
the public not to buy these so-called 'tiger' penises, paws and claws.
'These animal parts do not have proper AVA permits nor do they have
health certification. Consuming animal parts of unknown origin may pose
certain health risks as they may harbour bacteria.' |