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China hits back at US claims it is putting pangolins at risk

  • Beijing says Washington is trying ‘to damage China’s reputation’ by accusing it of fuelling the illicit trade in the endangered species
  • US comments follow last month’s seizure of a tonne of pangolin scales in Thailand believed to be destined for use in traditional Chinese medicine

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Pangolins are among the world’s most endangered species. Photo: Shutterstock

Beijing issued a strongly worded statement on Saturday rejecting accusations from the United States that China was fuelling the illicit trade in pangolins.

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“[China] expressed serious concern … and firmly opposed attempts to use the issue of pangolin protection to damage China’s reputation,” the statement issued by the National Forestry and Grassland Administration said.

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Pangolins continue to face threat of extinction despite wildlife trade bans

Pangolins continue to face threat of extinction despite wildlife trade bans

The body, which oversees the management of China’s wildlife, described the US’s accusation as another example of Washington’s “abuse of its long-arm jurisdiction”, and added that it risks undermining global efforts to protect the endangered animals.

“China has made and will continue to lodge solemn representations to the US in this regard,” the statement added.

On Friday, the US Department of the Interior said the department’s head Deb Haaland had issued a finding that Chinese nationals were “diminishing the effectiveness of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora by engaging in trade or taking of pangolin species”.

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It added: “This finding is based on the department’s review of the pangolin trade and the role of the PRC [People’s Republic of China] in continuing a demand and trade for these imperilled species.”

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