- 27 sub-Saharan African migrants die off Tunisia in shipwrecks
- UK grime star Stormzy banned from driving for nine months
- Neil Young dumps Glastonbury alleging 'BBC control'
- Swiatek battles back to take Poland into United Cup semis
- Electric cars took 89% of Norway market in 2024
- Rival South Korea camps face off as president holds out
- French downhill ace Sarrazin out of intensive care
- Djokovic cruises past Monfils as rising stars impress in Brisbane
- Montenegro mourns after gunman kills 12
- Sales surge in 2024 for Chinese EV giant BYD
- Agnes Keleti, world's oldest Olympic champion, dies at 103
- Andreeva, Mpetshi Perricard showcase Australian Open potential
- Afghan refugees suffer 'like prisoners' in Pakistan crackdown
- Coach tight-lipped on whether Rohit will play in final Australia Test
- Blooming hard: Taiwan's persimmon growers struggle
- South Korea's impeached president resists arrest over martial law bid
- Knicks roll to ninth straight NBA win, Ivey hurt in Pistons victory
- 'Numb' New Orleans grapples with horror of deadly truck attack
- Asia stocks begin year on cautious note
- FBI probes 'terrorist' links in New Orleans truck-ramming that killed 15
- 2024 was China's hottest year on record: weather agency
- Perera smashes 46-ball ton as Sri Lanka pile up 218-5 in 3rd NZ T20
- South Korea police raid Muan airport over Jeju Air crash that killed 179
- South Korea's Yoon resists arrest over martial law bid
- Sainz set to step out of comfort zone to defend Dakar Rally title
- New Year's fireworks accidents kill five in Germany
- 'I'm Still Here': an ode to Brazil resistance
- New Orleans attack suspect was US-born army veteran
- Australia axe Marsh, call-up Webster for fifth India Test
- Jets quarterback Rodgers ponders NFL future ahead of season finale
- Eagles' Barkley likely to sit out season finale, ending rushing record bid
- Syria FM hopes first foreign visit to Saudi opens 'new, bright page'
- At least 10 dead in Montenegro restaurant shooting: minister
- Arteta reveals Arsenal hit by virus before vital win at Brentford
- Palestinian Authority suspends Al Jazeera broadcasts
- Arsenal close gap on Liverpool as Jesus stars again
- Witnesses describe 'war zone' left in wake of New Orleans attack
- Cosmetic surgery aficionado Jocelyne Wildenstein dies aged 79: partner
- Tschofenig takes overall Four Hills lead after second leg win
- 10 killed in New Year's truck ramming in New Orleans, dozens hurt
- Leeds and Burnley held to draws as Windass hits Wednesday wonder strike
- New Orleans truck attack: what we know so far
- Saudi executes at least 338 people in 2024: AFP tally
- Migrants crossing Channel to UK in 2024 soar by 25 percent
- Power restored to most of Puerto Rico: utility
- Seko Fofana joins Rennes after Saudi Arabia stint
- Brazil's Amazon saw highest number of fires in 17 years: agency
- McGregor wants no let-up as Celtic aim to maintain Old Firm grip
- Truck ramming kills 10 New Year's revelers in New Orleans, injures dozens
- Ten dead as man drives truck into New Year crowd in New Orleans
Thailand to return nearly 1,000 trafficked lemurs, tortoises to Madagascar
Thailand is sending almost 1,000 highly endangered lemurs and tortoises back to their home in Madagascar, in what both countries called their biggest ever operation against wildlife trafficking.
Thai police found and confiscated 1,117 of the live and dead animals in the southern province of Chumphon in May -- the kingdom's largest ever seizure, according to the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment.
Thailand is a major transit hub for wildlife smugglers, who often sell highly-prized endangered creatures on the lucrative black market in China, Vietnam and Taiwan.
The repatriation of the 963 animals -- ring-tailed lemurs, brown lemurs, spider tortoises and radiated tortoises -- is a "significant step" in anti-trafficking operations, Minister of Natural Resources and Environment Chalermchai Sri-on said Wednesday.
"For the first time, wildlife is being repatriated prior to the conclusion of legal proceedings," he added.
Lemurs, which starred as loveable supporting characters in the Dreamworks "Madagascar" movies, are found only on the Indian Ocean island, and experts say they are threatened by trafficking into the pet trade.
The furry primates and the tortoises will be sent to special centres once they return to Madagascar, said its environment minister Max Andonirina Fontaine who was in Thailand to oversee the repatriation.
- 'Make a success story' -
Six people were arrested and charged with endangered animal trafficking in May, and could face up to 15 years in prison and be fined 1.5 million baht ($43,000), according to local Thai media.
The four species, which are endemic to Madagascar, are listed as near-extinct or threatened by the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).
"When two countries really collaborate together we can really make a success story," Fontaine told journalists on Wednesday.
Thailand is Southeast Asia's biggest legal importer and exporter of CITES-listed wildlife from Madagascar, according to a report from TRAFFIC, a wildlife NGO.
But according to the 2023 report, illegal trafficking persists and "the true extent is likely to be greater than those reflected by seizure records alone," it says.
Fontaine told AFP it is "difficult" to know the true number of animals smuggled out of Madagascar, but that the increase in seizures reflects improved anti-trafficking efforts.
In 2010, Thai customs authorities seized more than 200 live endangered tortoises being smuggled into the country from Madagascar.
In June this year Thai customs officials arrested six Indian nationals for attempting to smuggle a red panda and 86 other animals out of the kingdom.
A.Santos--PC