KUALA LUMPUR: Merchants who illegally
hawk endangered wildlife have begun using blogs to promote their business to
tech-savvy customers in Malaysia, an official said
Friday.
Authorities have arrested at least six people who used blogs
to unlawfully sell snakes, birds and other protected creatures in recent months,
said Sivananthan Elagupillay, the government Wildlife Department's enforcement
director.
He said department officials were scouring the Internet to
crack down on the new way of communicating by the arcane network of animal
buyers and sellers who traditionally have operated by
word-of-mouth.
Enforcement officers posing as clients made their
latest catch last weekend, detaining a man who sought to sell 17 endangered
pythons through his blog, Sivananthan said.
People who possess
threatened species of wildlife without an ownership license face a penalty of up
to three years in prison and a fine if convicted.
Officials have
seized numerous protected creatures this year, including owls, monitor lizards
and cobras. Most were meant for restaurants that offer exotic animal meat to the
same network of animal buyers and sellers.