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Tiger's severed head seized during Thai zoo raid
by Staff Writers
Bangkok (AFP) Dec 4, 2020

Brazil police arrest 11 in animal trafficking ring
Rio De Janeiro (AFP) Dec 4, 2020 - Police on Friday arrested one of Brazil's top wildlife traffickers and rescued about 200 animals set for illegal sale, officials said.

The Federal Police announced at a press conference that 14 arrest warrants had been issued and that 11 people had been arrested by midday.

The suspects are accused of illegally selling the animals through social media.

Some of the animals are endangered species captured in the Amazon rainforest, including macaws, toucans, monkeys and reptiles such as caimans.

Among those arrested is Roberto Augusto Martinez Filho, described by investigators as "one of the country's leading animal traffickers."

Martinez Filho had previously been arrested in August in possession of two monkeys at his home, but was released pending trial.

Another suspect "had been involved in wildlife trafficking for 38 years and was in the process of handing over the business to his son," the head of the Federal Police's Environmental Crimes Unit, Sebastiao Pujol, told a press conference.

The arrests were part of an operation launched in May 2019 that has so far yielded evidence used by police to save 500 animals, including more than 200 on Friday.

In addition to the offenses of animal trafficking and criminal conspiracy, the suspects are also accused of "endangering public health" because some of the species they handled are carriers of zoonoses, or diseases and infections that are transmissible from animals to humans.

Authorities in Thailand found a severed tiger's head when they raided a fake zoo near the country's border with Laos that has suspected links to an illegal wildlife trafficking racket.

Officials seized five live tigers at the Mukda Tiger Park and Farm -- which have been sent to a wildlife sanctuary -- while other tiger parts were also discovered.

The site in the north-eastern province of Mukdahan had claimed six cubs were born at the facility five years ago, but DNA tests have since confirmed the five seized tigers and the decapitated animal were not related to any others at the park.

This has raised suspicions that the zoo was being used as a holding facility for wildlife being smuggled into Laos and Vietnam.

"They have had a zoo licence to open as a business since 2012, but they claimed their facility was not ready to open," an official from the Thai Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation told AFP.

"We got tipped off from various international agencies about the strange activities conducted by this zoo."

The zoo's owner was not present during the raid on Monday and was wanted for questioning, the official said.

The zoo had 28 tigers in 2013, and five years later the population had jumped to 50, according to conservation group Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand. But by 2020 the number of tigers was down to 25.

"Think of this as animal laundering; once you change the identities of the animals they can no longer be traced," Edwin Wiek, the group's founder, told AFP.

"The profit from these tigers if sold can be between $5,000-$6,600 per tiger."

"The Mukda (Tiger Park and Farm) is essentially a safe house where these tigers are being parked there until they're sold to their Chinese customers in Laos."

Southeast Asia is a key battleground in the fight to save the big cats, whose numbers globally have plummeted from about 100,000 a century ago to fewer than 4,000 today.

High demand for tiger pelts and body parts in China and Vietnam fuels poaching. The body parts are used in traditional Chinese medicines.


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For decades scientists have been trying to figure out how to swiftly predict the twisting, tangled shape of proteins - and from there unravel a greater understanding of the machinery of life itself. This week an Artificial Intelligence program created by Google sister firm DeepMind was shown to have virtually cracked the challenge, forecasting the way in which proteins contort into three dimensional structures in the results of a biannual competition that judges hailed as a game changer. ... read more

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