Tiger Temple: Thai police charge 22 with wildlife trafficking

Buddhist monks among those held as authorities remove animals from tourist spot

Jars of dead tiger cubs are displayed after they were found during a raid at the Tiger Temple in Kanchanaburi Province, Thailand, 3rd June 2016. Photograph: Narong Sangnak/EPA
Jars of dead tiger cubs are displayed after they were found during a raid at the Tiger Temple in Kanchanaburi Province, Thailand, 3rd June 2016. Photograph: Narong Sangnak/EPA

Thai police have charged 22 people, including three Buddhist monks, with wildlife trafficking and removed more dead animals including a bear and a leopard from the ‘Tiger Temple’, authorities said on Friday.

The temple in Kanchanaburi province, west of the capital, Bangkok, has been a major tourist attraction for more than two decades, with visitors paying 600 baht (€15) admission to pose for photographs with the tigers.

Wildlife activists have accused the temple of illegally breeding the tigers while some visitors on online forums complained that the tigers appeared sedated.

Tiger male ‘Mak’ inside a cage after he was tranquilized to be moved by Thai National Park officials from the Tiger Temple in Kanchanaburi province. Photograph: Narong Sangnak/EPA
Tiger male ‘Mak’ inside a cage after he was tranquilized to be moved by Thai National Park officials from the Tiger Temple in Kanchanaburi province. Photograph: Narong Sangnak/EPA

The temple denies the accusations.

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Adisorn Nuchdamrong, from Thailand’s department of national parks, said 22 people had been charged with wildlife possession and trafficking, including 17 members of the temple’s foundation and three monks trying to flee with a truckload of tiger skins.

It followed the discovery on Wednesday of the bodies of 40 tigers cubs inside a freezer.

It remains unclear why the dead tiger cubs were being stored. Tiger bones and body parts are used in traditional Chinese medicine.

“We’ve confiscated all the hard disks of closed circuit cameras in this temple for police to find evidence of wrongdoing,” Adisorn said.

The temple officially opened in 1994 close to a wild tiger habitat. It received its first tiger cub, which had been found by villagers, in 1999.

The cub died soon after but villagers kept bringing cubs to the temple, usually when the mothers had been killed by poachers, the temple said.

Repeated efforts to shut down the temple have been blocked by the monks.

Thailand is a well-known trafficking hub of illicit wildlife products, including ivory.

Thailand’s wildlife department began raiding the temple on Monday. There were 137 tigers inside the temple and 119 have been removed.

The World Wildlife Fund said in April that the number of wild tigers in the world stands at around 3,890, with more than 100 wild tigers in Thailand.

Reuters