Malaysia

Van and Perry – Perhilitan’s heroes to curb wildlife smuggling activities in Malaysia

MAHB said the dogs were trained to detect hidden wildlife in luggage and these four-legged heroes help stop smuggling before it takes flight.

Updated 1 year ago · Published on 14 May 2025 5:56AM

Van and Perry – Perhilitan’s heroes to curb wildlife smuggling activities in Malaysia
These dogs can also help strengthen efforts to curb wildlife smuggling activities in and out of Malaysia. - May 14, 2025

THE Department of Wildlife Protection and National Parks (Perhilitan) Peninsular Malaysia successfully rescued protected wildlife species worth about RM5.4 million from being smuggled out through the Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA).

Its director-general Datuk Abdul Kadir Abu Hashim said the amount involved seizures between January 2023 and March 2025.

According to him, the animal species targeted for trafficking and smuggling were turtles, snakes, birds and primates, both local and exotic species.

"So far, 10 investigation papers have been opened by Perhilitan related to cases of wildlife smuggling through KLIA during the same period.

"On average, these wild animals are being smuggled to South Asia, Indonesia and Vietnam," he told Harian Metro.

Abdul Kadir said that baby siamangs, iguanas, bird species, snakes and turtles are the most frequently smuggled into or out of the country.

A total of 4,200 exotic animals were attempted to be smuggled through KLIA, a 42 percent jump compared to 2023.

India recorded 56 cases of foreign wildlife seizures in 2022; almost half of them arrived via Kuala Lumpur.

"Usually, these animals are put in plastic containers, packed in boxes or wrapped with stickers before being checked in as luggage.

"However, this tactic was successfully intercepted in the cargo zone, as well as thanks to Perhilitan's intelligence and successful cooperation with other enforcement agencies," he said.

According to him, illegal wildlife trafficking and smuggling activities can have long-term impacts, especially on endangered animal species in the country.

Malaysia Airports Holdings Bhd (MAHB) had earlier donated two detection dogs (K9) to Perhilitan to combat wildlife smuggling activities at KLIA.

The Belgian Malinois dogs named 'Van' and 'Perry', which were imported from the Netherlands, underwent intensive training with professional trainers to detect wildlife listed in the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, such as elephant ivory, rhinoceros horns, pangolin scales, snakes and turtles.

These dogs can also help strengthen efforts to curb wildlife smuggling activities in and out of Malaysia.

MAHB said the dogs were trained to detect hidden wildlife in luggage and these four-legged heroes help stop smuggling before it takes flight.

Flight services between Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) and Mumbai or Chennai, India are 'popular routes' used by protected wildlife smuggling syndicates. – May 14, 2025

Related News

World / 1mth

Thai monk brings smiles as he sails with adorable temple dogs every morning (video)

Malaysia / 9mth

Total ban on vape not the right solution, says Teresa Kok

Malaysia / 9mth

Attempt to smuggle several species of wildlife to India foiled

Community / 9mth

Penang CM: Time for us to be more compassionate to strays

Culture & Lifestyle / 10mth

Furrykids Safehaven to hold fundraising dinner for its over 2,000 dogs

Malaysia / 11mth

MACC: TMJ’s connections helped us bust smuggling syndicate

Spotlight

Malaysia

Rohingya teen faces death penalty after being charged with newborn baby’s death

Malaysia

Singapore: Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon to retire in Feb 2027, succeeded by Justice Sushil Nair

Malaysia

No further delays for water tariff hike in Penang - CM

Malaysia

Elderly fathers plead for help as sons vanish in suspected Southeast Asia scam networks

Malaysia

Social media influencer charged with statutory rape of underage girl in Kangar

Malaysia

Negeri Sembilan polls enter race mode as 36-seat battle begins

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

World

Europe heatwave linked to around 12,000 deaths as climate risks intensify

You may be interested

Malaysia

'We are the punching bag and the bogeyman' - says Loke as PH eyes 20-seat victory

Malaysia

Dewan Rakyat passes Statistics Bill 2026 to strengthen data governance, evidence-based policymaking

Malaysia

ASLI to field female candidate in Jeram Padang DUN

Malaysia

BN’s 11 unnamed seats fuel speculation of PN pact in Negeri Sembilan polls

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Cabinet backs compensation orders for road accident victims

Malaysia

PETRA unveils LSS6 solar initiative with 2,500mw capacity to boost renewable energy transition

Malaysia

BN-PN cooperation talks revive questions over political loyalty as PAS shifts closer to Umno

By The Vibes Says

Malaysia

Govt to pilot MediAsas this month as RESET strategy targets rising private healthcare costs