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Expat Life in Thailand

H.E. Mr. Abderrahim Rahhaly, the Ambassador of the Kingdom of Morocco to the Kingdom...

This year marks 37 years since Morocco and Thailand established diplomatic ties. Expat Life recently sat down with H. E. Mr.…

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H.E. Mr. Ganesh Prasad Dhakal The Ambassador of Nepal to Thailand

As Nepal, which is a favoured destination, especially for adventure tourism opens up for overseas tourists, Expat Life took the opportunity…

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Art and Culture

National Day of Portugal Message by H.E. Mr. Joao-Bernardo Weinstein

Portuguese Ambassador to the Kingdom of Thailand  On the occasion of the National Day of Portugal, I thought it would…

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H.E. Mrs. Orna Sagiv Ambassador of Israel to Thailand

In July last year, H.E. Mrs. Orna Sagiv arrived in Phuket for 14 day quarantine and immediately resumed the duty…

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H.E. Mr. Jose Borges dos Santos Junior, The Brazilian Ambassador to Thailand

In September last year, H.E. Mr. Jose Borges dos Santos Junior, Ambassador of the Embassy of Brazil to the Kingdom…

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H.E. Mrs. C.A. Chaminda I. Colonne The Sri Lankan Ambassador to Thailand

February 4th marks the Independence Day of Sri Lanka. Expat Life sat down with H.E. Mrs. C.A. Chaminda I. Colonne, the…

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H.E. Mr. David Daly the European Ambassador to Thailand

Expat Life in Thailand were honoured to sit down and talk to the new European Union Ambassador David Daly. Personally,…

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News and Event

Black Caviar: An exquisite delicacy

Black Caviar is one of the world’s most exquisite and exotic foods. Fish roe that is from a sturgeon is considered…

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SIMON LANDY’S INTERVIEW

We speak today to Simon Landy MBE, a long term resident of Thailand, highly successful real estate executive and property…

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H.E. Mr. Mark Gooding the British Ambassador to Thailand

Expat Life had the pleasure of sitting down with H.E. Mark Gooding the British Ambassador to Thailand and discuss his…

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Hotels and accommodationTravel and Leisure

Movenpick Resort Khao Yai

I write this from the terrace of what could be a castle in a fairytale. A German Palace in the…

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H.E. Mr. Lindsay Kimwole Kiptiness, The Kenyan Ambassador to Thailand

Thailand and Kenya have enjoyed cordial ties and close cooperation since the establishment of diplomatic relations in 1967. Kenya opened its…

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Enforcers Team Up to Break Wildlife Trafficking Networks

by Expat Life July 2, 2022
written by Expat Life July 2, 2022

Eleven Sabah agencies hosted by Sabah Wildlife Department Complete Specialist Training

(Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia) — Counter-trafficking experts conducted a specialized training course in Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia from June 20-24. The course, which was officially launched by the Sabah Wildlife Department’s Director Augustine Tuuga, is designed to help local enforcers find and dismantle criminal networks that are targeting the state of Sabah’s rich biodiversity and attempting to use Sabah as part of their global, illicit wildlife supply chains.

Typically, the multi-billion dollar illicit trade in wild animals and their products starts in forest and marine habitats and extends to cities and ports, where organized crime groups smuggle rare and threatened animals across borders to established markets. In the case of Sabah, there is growing evidence that such supply chains have transited the state, sometimes with links to Africa and other Asian nations.

For example, a joint law enforcement operation in 2019, undertaken by Sabah wildlife authorities and police, targeted an illegal wildlife factory outside of Kota Kinabalu and resulted in a historic seizure of 30 metric tons of pangolins –the most heavily trafficked mammal in the world. Authorities recently revealed that the animals (most of which had already been killed and their lucrative body parts removed), were sourced locally and abroad and were prepared for onward shipment within the Asian region.

The “CTOC” program (Counter-Transnational Organized Crime) was brought to Sabah and tailored for local authorities to help them identify, target and dismantle the criminal syndicates behind the illegal trade.

Delivered by law enforcement, intelligence, and conservationist specialists, CTOC was designed by Freeland, a counter-trafficking organization. CTOC includes skill building in intelligence collection, evaluation, targeting, and operational planning. In addition to training, CTOC convenes agencies to form counter-wildlife trafficking task forces.

The CTOC event was co-organized by WWF-Malaysia in local partnership with the Sabah Wildlife Department (SWD). Together, WWF-Malaysia and SWD conducted a needs assessments for the course, and helped recruit 11 Sabah-based agencies to attend it.

Anticipating increased interdictions of wildlife, IFAW and WWF are organizing a follow-on training in July for frontline officers about handling and taking care of confiscated wild animals. That course will also introduce new genetic traceability and forensic tools.

Sabah is considered a global hotspot for biodiversity, featuring one of the world’s oldest rainforests that hosts orangutans, clouded leopards, proboscis monkeys, elephants and many more species. Palm oil plantations have reduced Sabah’s forest cover and made its wildlife more vulnerable to subsistence and commercial hunting.

Freeland, WWF and IFAW are partners in a project called “TRIPOD” (Targeting Regional Investigations for Policing Opportunities & Development), which is sponsored by the US Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs. TRIPOD aims to reduce wildlife trafficking in the Southeast Asian sub-region of Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines. Additional TRIPOD trainings and networking events will be held in Indonesia and the Philippines in the coming months. TRIPOD is also creating a comprehensive “toolkit” for frontline officers to support their counter-trafficking efforts.
For further information:[email protected]or[email protected]

Freelandis a frontline counter-trafficking organization staffed by law enforcement, development and communications specialists in Asia, Africa and the Americaswho build capacity, raise awareness, and promote good governance to protect vulnerable people, wildlife, and ecosystems from trafficking, corruption, and neglect.
WWF-Malaysia is part of the international conservation organization WWF that is working to sustain the natural world for the benefit of people and wildlife. WWF-Malaysia’s efforts to conserve nature focus on six major goals – forests, oceans, wildlife, food, climate and energy, as well as freshwater – and three key drivers of environmental problems – markets, finance and governance.

The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) is a global non-profit helping animals and people thrive together. We are experts and everyday people, working across seas, oceans and in more than 40 countries around the world. We rescue, rehabilitate and release animals, and we restore and protect their natural habitats.
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Expat Life

Expat Life in Thailand is a community lifestyle magazine for expatriates (a person who has citizenship in at least one country, but who is living in another country) living in Thailand with an appetite and a zest for the best of life!

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