Bringing down the Dragon: An analysis of China’s largest ivory smuggling case

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www.wildlifejustice.org

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ESTABLISHED BUSINESS OPERATIONS IN A SUSCEPTIBLE COUNTRY

Organised crime, including wildlife trafficking, thrives in countries with weak governance and rule of law, poor regulatory and enforcement capacity, and high levels of corruption. Criminal groups seek out locations to set up their operations that will facilitate an ease of doing illicit business, and they will adapt and shift in response to strengthening law enforcement efforts if those locations become “too hot” to use. Nigeria is highly susceptible to organised crime and ranked 5th for criminality out of 193 countries worldwide in the Global Organised Crime Index, due to the widespread presence of criminal markets across the country and the size and type of criminal actors behind them.10 It was also ranked 149th out of 180 countries in the Global Corruption Perception Index for 2020, indicating high levels of perceived public sector corruption.11 Nigeria has grown in relevance to the global supply chain of ivory and pangolin scales over the past decade, particularly since 2017 with a rapid increase in the number of shipments linked to Nigeria. By 2019 it had emerged as the primary transit hub for the trafficking of ivory and pangolin scales out of Africa destined for Asian consumer markets.12,13 Due to the small population of elephants in Nigeria it is believed that most of the ivory is sourced from other African countries, such as the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Republic of Congo, and Central

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African Republic (CAR), and moves through Cameroon into Nigeria for shipping. Their well-established business operations, good transport links, and access to corrupt actors are some of the factors that may have attracted the Chen OCG to use Nigeria as a base to export illicit wildlife products from. The criminal network had been operating their coal and timber export company in Nigeria for several years and may have been lured by the large profits and lack of serious consequences to opportunistically introduce illegal activities to their operations. It is notable that the Chen OCG was using Nigeria for its wildlife trafficking operations since at least 2013, but likely earlier than that, and well before it became a global trafficking hotspot. This could potentially indicate the size and importance of this network in being so far ahead of the broader shift in trafficking dynamics to Nigeria in 2017. The Chen OCG had a team of buyers in Nigeria who were responsible for sourcing and packing the ivory for shipping to China. Hu Juqiang was from the same hometown in China as the Chen family and was a senior ivory buyer who had lived in Africa for many years. Chen Chengzong’s cousin Wang Qingshan had helped source ivory in Africa since 2014, and Chengzong’s girlfriend’s cousin Zhuang Jiawei went to Nigeria to assist in 2017. The Chen’s established timber businesses in Nigeria and China

https://ocindex.net/country/nigeria https://www.transparency.org/en/cpi/2020/index/nga 12 https://wildlifejustice.org/significant-changes-in-dynamics-ivory-trafficking/ 13 https://wildlifejustice.org/new-report-analyses-unprecedented-levels-of-pangolin-trafficking-urgingstakeholders-to-tackle-it-as-transnational-crime/ 11


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