×
NewsDay

AMH is an independent media house free from political ties or outside influence. We have four newspapers: The Zimbabwe Independent, a business weekly published every Friday, The Standard, a weekly published every Sunday, and Southern and NewsDay, our daily newspapers. Each has an online edition.

Hong Kong returns poached abalone haul to S.Africa

News
CAPE TOWN – A massive haul of the gourmet mollusc abalone that was illegally harvested in South Africa has returned to the country after it was seized in Hong Kong. Rampant poaching has decimated the abalone population in South Africa’s coastal waters to feed demand for the high-priced delicacy in Asia, where the molluscs have […]

CAPE TOWN – A massive haul of the gourmet mollusc abalone that was illegally harvested in South Africa has returned to the country after it was seized in Hong Kong.

Rampant poaching has decimated the abalone population in South Africa’s coastal waters to feed demand for the high-priced delicacy in Asia, where the molluscs have also been over harvested, forcing buyers to look elsewhere.

The 2.6 tonnes of abalone will be auctioned, with the proceeds going to a fund aimed at protecting South Africa’s marine resources, said Lionel Adendorf, a spokesman for the country’s fisheries department.

“It is the first time that South Africa (has) worked with a foreign country to have illegally poached, harvested and processed abalone returned to South Africa,” Adendorf said on Tuesday, as the crates of dried abalone were offloaded from a truck at a fisheries department warehouse in Cape Town.

Between 2007 and 2009, South African officials confiscated 107 tonnes of abalone, according to the latest available government data. But this was believed to be only a fraction of the abalone illicitly harvested.

Abalone cling to rocks in fairly shallow waters just off the coast, making them a relatively easy target for divers who pry them loose with knives.