Quick inspections and powerlessness of forest rangers

The trading and butchering of wildlife animals in the “red list” have been found in markets in the western region, especially Thanh Hoa agricultural product market in Long An province.

Hanoi (VNA) – The trading and butchering of wildlife animals in the “red list” have been found in markets in the western region, especially Thanh Hoa agricultural product market in Long An province. 

Quick inspections and powerlessness of forest rangers ảnh 1The illegal trading of wildlife can be found easily at Thanh Hoa agricultural product market in the Mekong Delta province of Long An (Photo: VietnamPlus)


Local forest rangers, however, have yet to take strong actions against the massive wildlife trafficking although they have been informed by a VietnamPlus reporter. 

Quick inspections 

After making fact-finding trips to markets in the Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap and detected the trafficking of rare animals there, the VietnamPlus reporter contacted and sent photos to the provincial forest protection agency whose head promised to dispatch forest rangers to the markets in the next morning. 

However, the local forest rangers said they found no signs of wildlife smuggling in these markets, and they plan to carry out an inspection across the province and will inform the results to the reporter. 

A similar situation was seen in Long An province where head of the provincial forest protection agency passed the buck to forest rangers at the district level. 

[WWF helps Vietnam combat wildlife trafficking]

However, as the reporter could not contact the forest protection station in Thanh Hoa district, they tried to seek support from head of the Forest Protection Department Do Quang Tung. 

Quick inspections and powerlessness of forest rangers ảnh 2Many rare species of turtles are sold in the market. The market has about 40 booths with hundreds of iron cages that imprison rare birds, Asian openbills, turtles and snakes (Photo: VietnamPlus)


After a 30-minute conversation, the reporter found that traders quickly hid cages of turtles, snakes and birds. Two forest rangers rode a bike around the market, pointing at and telling something to the traders, without taking any specific actions. Their inspection lasted for about 3-5 minutes. 

Astonished by the quick inspection, the reporter contacted again with Le Huu Loi, head of the provincial forest protection agency, but he insisted that forest rangers found nothing.

 “We come to check the market every week,” he said no later than traders displaying these animals in the market again. 

Asked why forest rangers found nothing during the inspection while wildlife animals were still put on sale before and after that, Loi explained that this problem has lingered for a long time. 

“The provincial People’s Committee has established an inter-sectoral inspection group and all competent forces got involved, but the trafficking has still continued. We have no ways,” he said. 

Nguyen Van Sung, head of the Thanh Hoa district forest protection station, further explained the traders know well forest rangers, so they can easily hide these animals when the forest rangers come. 

Hopelessly waiting for inter-sectoral actions

After the reporter sent photos of evidence to Do Quang Tung, head of the Forest Protection Department, he promised to dispatch a special group to the site. 

However, Dong Xuan Hung, deputy head of the special group of forest rangers under the Forest Protection Department, told the reporter that all of the group members were on a working trip, and pledged to conduct an inspection in the next few days. 

Quick inspections and powerlessness of forest rangers ảnh 3Burnt birds of rare species are put on sale at Thanh Hoa market. Dozens and even hundreds of transactions of birds are made in just a few days at the market. (Photo: VietnamPlus) 


Later, Hung told the reporter that they had yet to conduct the inspection as scheduled, explaining that he has been asking for the permission of his senior for a joint inspection. 

[Project launched to boost ties in threatened species conservation] 


Thousands of turtles, snakes and birds have been killed while competent agencies are completing procedures for the inspection. 

Tung further said that market management is the responsibility of local authorities who have to report wildlife smuggling cases to complement forces like police and forest rangers. 

“We cannot do anything if localities take no action,” he said, insisting that to handle the problem, it needs the drastic involvement of local authorities. 

Quick inspections and powerlessness of forest rangers ảnh 4Birds are kept in iron cages to make it easier for customers to select. Hundreds of Asian openbills are forced to stay in cages, cruelly tied with sticky tape. (Photo: VietnamPlus)


Among hundreds of types of wildlife animals in the “red list” put on sale, snail-eating turtle (scientifically known as Malayemys subtrijuga) and yellow-headed turtle (Heosemys annandalii) have been favoured by customers. 

In the Mekong Delta region, turtles are being traded for food or ornamental purposes. Meanwhile, in the north, they are killed for bone concentration, pushing them on the verge of extinction./.

VNA

See more

Ice coats the summit of Fansipan in the northern province of Lao Cai in the early morning of December 25. (Photo: Published by VNA)

Peak Fansipan blanketed in ice on Christmas Day

With temperatures hovering between 1 and 3 degrees Celsius, frost and ice covered the summit area, creating an ideal condition for tourists eager to admire icy scenery, clouds and experience a Christmas atmosphere amid a sea of cold mist.

Illustrative image (Photo: nhandan.vn)

20 trailblazing companies in national green ESG rankings honoured

In 2025-2026, the “For a Green National Environment” programme will pivot around six tasks that merge expertise with broad social outreach, including targeted communications, "Journey to Net Zero" conferences and trainings, ESG surveys and announcements, a "National Green Ambassador" contest, a "Green Fashion" design competition, and the rollout of "National Green Station" models focused on zero-waste living.

Air pollution in Hanoi. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi to launch 5,000 public electric bicycles

In a move to reduce air pollution and promote green mobility, Hanoi has approved a plan to deploy 5,000 public electric bicycles, alongside restrictions on petrol- and diesel-powered vehicles in the city’s central area.

Official heritage plaque i sinstalled on the 12 recognised Shan Tuyet tea trees in Dong Phuc commune. (Photo: VNA)

Thai Nguyen: 12 ancient Shan Tuyet tea trees win national heritage status

The recognition honours the biological, cultural and historical values of these centuries-old Shan Tuyet tea trees – natural treasures deeply woven into the livelihoods, traditions and identity of local ethnic communities. The title affirms the community’s commitment to preserving and promoting the value of this iconic local tea variety.

Sarus cranes at Tram Chim National Park (Photo: VNA)

Return of sarus cranes: Hope takes wing in Dong Thap wetland

Beneath the wide Mekong Delta sky, Tram Chim National Park is racing against time, pouring heart and science into a decade-long (2022–2032) plan to rescue the Eastern sarus crane – an elegant, scarlet-headed bird listed as endangered on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List and a living emblem of both the park and all of Dong Thap province

French Ambassador Olivier Brochet speaks at the press conference in Hanoi on December 11 to mark the 10th anniversary of the Paris Agreement on climate change and highlighting the COP30 outcomes. (Photo: VNA)

International community ready to support Vietnam in energy transition, climate response

In a video message to the press conference, UN Resident Coordinator in Vietnam Pauline Tamesis said the UN is ready to support Vietnam in building a pipeline of projects capable of absorbing financing mobilised under the Political Declaration on establishing the Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP), as well as from global climate finance sources, including the Green Climate Fund and the Loss and Damage Fund.

Forest rangers in Son La province apply technological devices and software to forest management, monitoring, and protection. (Photo: nhandan.vn)

Digital technology application enhances forest management, protection

With a total forest area of over 14 million hectares, including more than 10 million hectares of natural forests, forests exist in all 34 provinces and cities across the country. Given the large area and limited workforce, applying digital solutions in forest management and protection has become a top priority for the forestry sector.

Sunda pangolins (Manis javanica), also known as the Javan pangolin, are listed in Group IB – critically endangered and strictly protected from all commercial exploitation (Photo: VNA)

Quang Ngai releases rare pangolin back into nature

Initial verification showed that the animal weighed 3.7kg and measured over 60cm. It was identified as a Sunda pangolin (Manis javanica), also known as the Javan pangolin, listed in Group IB – critically endangered and strictly protected from all commercial exploitation.