Suspect in Lao bear cub trafficking case is on the run

A Chinese man found with 16 black bear cubs during a raid of a microfinance institute by Lao authorities last week is on the run, while the cubs are now being cared for by a wildlife conservation group in Luang Prabang province, a district official said Friday.

The incident is the latest case of the illegal transportation of wildlife in Laos a hub for wildlife trafficking for the exotic pet trade and medicinal purposes. Such activities are banned by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, or CITES, which protects endangered plants and animals.

On March 17, police from the environment division of Vientiane’s Department of Public Security and from Sikhottabong district’s public security office raided the Chinese-owned Ya Thai Microfinance Institute in the district’s Nongsanokham village to rescue the animals.

Police seized the bear cubs after the Chinese man’s Lao wife would not tell them where they came from. They said they arrested her and are searching for the man, who owns the institute, and others who may be involved.

Asiatic black bears, also known as moon bears because of the white or cream-colored crescent pattern on their chests, are listed in CITES’ most crucial category of endangered due to overhunting and to loss of habitat as forests are felled. 

As a CITES member, Laos must abide by the treaty’s prohibition on the international trade of live Asiatic bears or bear parts.

Demand for bear bile

Poachers can demand exorbitant sums for the bears’ gallbladders and bile, which are used in traditional medicines believed to cure a variety of ailments. 

They extract the bile, which helps protect the bears’ livers and prevents gallstones and illness during long hibernations, during which the animals are subdued and jabbed in the abdomen with needles in an attempt to pierce their gallbladders.

The official from the Sikhottabong district office, who declined to be named because he is not authorized to speak to the media, told Radio Free Asia that the Chinese owner of the institute fled after police raided the office, and authorities are now searching for him.

The Chinese man has a history of trafficking wildlife and other illegal activities, he said.

Lao authorities involved in the raid would not comment on the incident to RFA.

No one at the Ya Thai Microfinance Institute answered the phone when RFA called.

On March 20, police handed the cubs over to the Australian wildlife organization Free the Bears, to keep them in its wildlife sanctuary in Luang Prabang, according to a video on the Facebook page of Vientiane’s Department of Public Security. 

In the video, the cubs, some of which are inside pet carriers, can be heard crying out.

Lt. Col. Chansamouth Chanthalangsone, deputy head of the environment division at the department, said in the video that the bears were brought to the capital city without proper documentation, constituting the illegal transportation of wildlife.

He did not mention how authorities knew to raid the office, though the institute is located in a building where people live close to each other, so they might have heard the bears screaming.

The Free the Bears office in Luang Prabang declined to give RFA any information about the incident, citing the investigation.

In mid-February, Free the Bears took possession of two male moon bear cubs that had been held in a cage for more than two years near the Laos-Thailand border. The bear cubs had been raised by a villager in remote Xayaburi province since their birth. 

Translated by Phouvong for RFA Lao. Edited by Roseanne Gerin and Malcolm Foster.

You heard it here first

When Hong Kong’s Legislative Council unanimously passed a strict national security law under Article 23 of its mini-constitution, China’s state broadcaster CCTV beat out its competitors by posting the results of the vote nearly 20 minutes before the Council’s 89 lawmakers had started voting. The Council members won their seats under new electoral rules that allow only “patriots” loyal to Beijing to stand. Their unanimous vote for a law that makes treason, insurrection and sabotage punishable by up to life in prison called to mind China’s rubber-stamp parliament, the National People’s Congress.

Airstrikes and shelling have killed 70 civilians in Myanmar’s Rakhine state

More than 70 civilians were killed in seven western Myanmar townships during the first three weeks of March as the junta sent airstrikes and artillery fire into communities where it recently lost control, local residents told Radio Free Asia.

The indiscriminate shelling in residential areas has injured more than 100 civilians in the seven townships captured by the rebel ethnic Arakan Army since November, according to residents.

“We are afraid of jet fighters flying,” a woman from Rakhine state’s Kyauktaw township told RFA. “At night, we cannot sleep well out of fear.” 

The Arakan Army, or AA, took control of Kyauktaw in January and drove junta troops out of Mrauk-U and Minbya townships in February. Residents there have faced daily airstrikes since early March, according to Mya Tun, the director of Arakan Human Rights Defenders and Promoters Association.   

“The bombardment on villages is an inhuman act,” he said. “Schools and houses have been destroyed. The military uses highly destructive cluster bombs and 500-pound bombs.”

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A Myanmar junta airstrike demolished these buildings in Ramree township, Rakhine state, Feb. 21, 2024. (AA Info Desk)

Airstrikes and artillery shelling has also taken place in Myay Pon, Ponnagyun and Pauktaw townships in Rakhine and in Paletwa township in neighboring Chin state.

‘Grave civilian safety risks’

According to RFA’s figures, 73 civilians were killed and 103 were injured in airstrikes and artillery shelling in those townships between March 1 and March 18.  

In Myay Pon, junta airstrikes destroyed homes and schools, residents said. In Mrauk-U, aerial drone attacks on March 15 and March 17 in ethnic Rakhine neighborhoods left three dead and eight injured. 

“The military council carried out retaliatory airstrikes after they suffered the loss of their soldiers in Kyauktaw, Mrauk-U and Minbya townships,” a Mrauk-U resident told RFA on condition of anonymity for security reasons. “Another reason for these attacks is to cause trouble to Rakhine people.”

Rakhines, also known as Arakanese, are one of 135 officially recognized ethnic groups in Myanmar. 

Rakhine state has been the center of intense clashes since the AA ended a ceasefire in November that had been in place since the military seized power in a February 2021 coup d’etat. 

Fighting between the AA and junta troops is now taking place in 15 of Rakhine state’s 17 townships, the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, or UNOCHA, said on Wednesday.

“Artillery fire and aerial bombardment, including in residential areas, are causing grave civilian safety risks,” it said in a statement.

A March 14 statement from UNOCHA said that the resurgence of fighting in Rakhine state has left more than 300,000 people displaced since November.

RFA attempted to contact Hla Thein, the junta’s spokesman for Rakhine state, for a response to allegations that junta air strikes have targeted civilians, but he didn’t respond.

Translated by Aung Naing. Edited by Matt Reed and Malcolm Foster.

Episode 1: From Russia With ‘Legos’

Podcast Free Asia

When we were brainstorming what to call this podcast, since we are “Radio Free Asia,” and podcasting is a radio format, Amy offered up the suggestion “Podcast Free Asia,” garnering a few chuckles. A few other titles were suggested, including “WTF,” “WTRFA,” “Eyes on Asia” (which was a previous English podcast at RFA), “Ear on Asia,” and RFA Insider. They went with “RFA Insider” as a working title, but it looks like that may have stuck at this point.

That said, Amy in the first episode wanted to dub the section where we explained why were doing a podcast as “Podcast Free Asia.” So from here on, any podcast-related news, announcements, corrections, and banter.. basically anything between the contact information bumper and The Rundown will be henceforth known as “Podcast Free Asia.”

Eugene and Amy took the time to explain why we decided to make this podcast.

One major reason is because the English Service does not (yet) have any content where personalities appear in front of the camera or microphone like RFA’s other language services. This will enable our audience to get to know some of the people in the English Service through this medium.

Another reason is because the dedicated journalists in the language services are often only known through bylines on the English Service website. Through this podcast we can showcase not only the valuable work that the other language services do, but also the people who do it.  

The Rundown

Cantonese Service reproted that China wants English speakers to stop calling 2024 the “Year of the Dragon,” instead inserting the Chinese word for dragon, which is usually transliterated as “long.” However, because the “Year of the Long” would be confusing, whomever is behind the campaign added an extra o. So 2024 should be the “Year of the Loong.” Eugene was not impressed.

The Asia Fact Check Lab debunked the disinformation that suggested U.S. President Jimmy Carter in 1978 said it was the U.S. position that Taiwan was a part of the People’s Republic of China. This was not the case. Carter was simply saying that the U.S. acknowledges the Chinese position that Taiwan is a part of China. This is an early application of Washington’s One China Policy, which takes no position on Taiwan’s sovreignity. 

How it’s made

We interviewed Jamin Anderson from the Korean Service who created an excellent news piece about Ilya Voskresensky, a Russian travel blogger who was among the first guided tour to North Korea in four years. Jamin explained how she was able to track Ilya down even though she does not speak Russian, and how eager Ilya was to work with her. He additionally sent a whole library of great photos and videos of his journey, including pictures of some knockoff legos that he purchased as a present for his son!

About RFA Insider

Kick back with RFA staffers Amy Lee and Eugene Whong as they discuss Radio Free Asia’s latest stories and take you behind the scenes to show you how RFA journalists use their expertise and connections to deliver the news to our global audience.

Segments

  • In The Rundown the Insider crew discuss and react to two or three of the zanier stories that RFA English published since the previous episode, and hopefully laughter and hijinx ensue.
  • In How it’s Made we interview a guest, usually a journalist from one of the language services to go more in depth about a particular story they worked on, and also to go a bit behind the scenes to discuss the news reporting process and any challenges they may have faced in putting it together, as well as any further anecdotes they might have about how the story was made.
  • What’s in a word is an occasional segment where, usually with a knowledgeable guest, the Insiders digest terminology and explain why certain terms are used at RFA and others are avoided. How one calls certain bodies of water, country names, and names of people can sometimes be either confusing or controversial. 

About the Hosts

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Amy Lee

Amy is an Editing, Translation and Research Associate for RFA’s Research, Training and Evaluation team, which is to say that she works with translators, edits and occasionally writes things.

Amy is a Richmond, Virginia native who studied print journalism at Virginia Commonwealth University. During her undergraduate years, she covered Richmond City politics for the student news wire and wrote about Korean entertainment for Seoulbeats.

Amy left Richmond to live in a snow globe through the Japan Exchange Teaching Program, also known as JET, where she taught English in a rural town with one of the highest annual snowfalls in Japan. During her two-year stint, she served as Travel Editor for the JET Program’s nationwide magazine “CONNECT.” Amy moved to Washington, D.C. and continued working with the JET Program office before joining RFA in 2021.

Amy speaks English, Mandarin (Chinglish) and a little Korean. She enjoys watching true crime, bouldering, taking blurry photos on her film camera and tending to her plants.

 

 

 

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Eugene Whong

Eugene is an English News Editor for RFA’s English Service who specializes in content about North Korea. 

Born and raised in Silver Spring, Maryland, Eugene attended the University of Maryland, College Park, and like Amy, was also a teacher on the JET Program and is therefore her senpai by more than a decade. 

After finishing a three-year stint in Japan, Eugene moved to South Korea, one of his many ancestral homelands (yes he’s of Korean descent even though he has a weird spelling of 황). He was supposed to be there for just two years for grad school at Yonsei University.

Eugene’s media career started when he became a guest on radio and TV shows for several Seoul-based outlets, most prominently at tbs eFM, a city-funded English-language radio station. His role at the station gradually increased, and he served as a writer for entertainment shows, then as a reporter and anchor for the news team. He also wrote feature articles for Yonhap News.

Eugene and several coworkers founded the Café Seoul Podcast, which he produced, and he served as a cohost for most of its run. Keen listeners might notice some similarities between Café Seoul and RFA Insider.

Eugene returned to the United States in the 11th year of his two-year plan. He moved to Washington, DC and began working at RFA in 2018. 

Eugene speaks English mostly but he is also conversational in Japanese and Korean (just not at the same time), and he has almost completely forgotten high school Spanish. 

Eugene is also a big nerd and is into old school tabletop roleplaying games, retro video games, Star Wars, Star Trek, Transformers G1 and many other geeky things. He is also a huge sports fan and follows the Baltimore Orioles and the NFL franchise in Washington, but he thinks that soccer is the best sport to see live.

 

  

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