Vietnamese Rhino Horn Smuggler Sentenced to 10 Years by South African Court

A 10-year jail sentence has been given to a Vietnamese man who attempted to smuggle rhino horns out of South Africa.


The Kempton Park Magistrate’s Court has sentenced a Vietnamese man to 10 years in jail for attempting to smuggle rhino horns from South Africa to Vietnam.

Rhino DNA match

According to Eyewitness News, security guard Xuan Hoang traveled to South Africa in March to collect seven rhino horns, weighing 16 kilograms and worth R900,000. His plan was to return to Vietnam with the rhino horns.

The horns were found to be a DNA match to rhinos that had been killed just a few days earlier.

A ‘strong message needs to be sent to Vietnam’

Magistrate Prince Manyathi said a fine would not be enough to deter the rhino poaching scourge and ignored the defense’s request for mercy, adding that a “strong message needs to be sent to Vietnam”.

The most recent research done by wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC found that the majority of rhino horn leaving South Africa is destined for consumer markets in China and Vietnam.

Although rhino horn has been extensively analyzed and found to have no medicinal value, persistent cultural myths and superstitions in China and Vietnam attribute “healing powers” to rhino horn.

Source: Eyewitness News

Image: istock.com

Rhishja Cota-Larson

I am the founder of Saving Rhinos LLC, which publishes news and information about the global rhino crisis. Besides writing Rhino Horn is Not Medicine, I am the author of the book Murder, Myths & Medicine, the Editor of Project Pangolin, and a writer for the environmental news blog Planetsave. When I'm not blogging about the illegal wildlife trade, I like to rock out to live music.

More Posts - Website - Twitter - Facebook

You might also enjoy:

1 Comment

One Comment

  1. Congratulation to Magistrate Prince Manyathi for handing out a tough sentence to the Vietnamese Rhino horns smuggler/trader. Stamp out these illegal Rhino horns trade from S.A and every where in the world. Keep up the good works.