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Hong Kong’s incense trees get chunks carved out by illegal loggers, turtle poachers on the prowl as borders reopen
- Residents on Lamma and Lantau report intruders chopping down valuable old trees in dead of night
- ‘Worrying signs’ of poachers at work, as population of turtles shrinks by 90 per cent at some sites
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Damon Wong woke up one morning in February to find that part of an old incense tree near his home on Hong Kong’s Lamma Island had been chopped off.
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Neighbours said they had heard people using machines to saw wood during the night.
A few days later, more of the tree was gone.
“We all know what happened to it,” said Wong, 38, a former resident representative at his village.
Illegal logging of valuable incense trees had resumed after a three-year break during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Early last month, Hong Kong police arrested 12 people from mainland China for illegal logging of at least 13 incense trees worth an estimated HK$2.3 million (US$292,990) on Lamma Island.
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