
In this photo taken on 13 March 2012, Nguyen Huong Giang, 24, grinds rhinoceros horn with water at her apartment in Hanoi, Vietnam, demonstrating how she makes a liquid concoction she ingests after drinking too much alcohol or when suffering from allergies. Photo courtesy of www.sfgate.com
By MIKE IVES, Associated Press
HA NOI ― Nguyen Huong Giang loves to party but loathes hangovers, so she ends her whiskey benders by tossing back shots of rhino horn ground with water on a special ceramic plate.
Her father gave her the 4-inch brown horn as a gift, claiming it cures everything from headaches to cancer.
“I don’t know how much it costs,” said Giang, 24, after showing off the horn in her high-rise apartment overlooking Ha Noi. “I only know it’s expensive.”
Experts say
This week
“It’s a very dire situation,” U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe said by telephone. “We have very little cushion for these populations in the wild.”
Although data on the global rhino horn trade is scarce, poaching in Africa has soared in the past two years, with American officials saying
Wildlife advocates say that over the past decade, rhino horn has become a must-have luxury item for some Vietnamese nouveau riche, alongside Gucci bags and Maybach cars.
Between 2006 and 2008, three diplomats at the Vietnamese Embassy in
A court affidavit obtained by The Associated Press alleges one of those arrested in the U.S. case, Felix Kha, traveled to China 12 times between 2004 and 2011 and went to Viet Nam five times last year.
“There are still horns going into
The rhino horn craze offers bigger payoffs than other exotic wildlife products such as bear bile or tiger bone paste. American officials say the crushed powder fetches up to $$25,000 per pound — a price that can top the U.S. street value of a similar amount of cocaine, making the hoof-like substance literally as valuable as gold.
The drive is so great, thieves are now pinching rhino horns from European museums and taxidermy shops, sometimes smashing them off with sledgehammers before fleeing. According to Europol, the European law enforcement agency, 72 rhino horns were stolen from 15 European countries in 2011, the first year such data was recorded.
Poachers in
Sometimes, they simply shoot the beasts dead, even though the horns can grow back within two years without harming the animal if carefully cut. Officials and nonprofits in
Tran Dang Trung, who manages a zoo outside Ha Noi that imported four white rhinos from
“If thieves wanted to kill the animals and steal their valuable parts, they could,” Trung said recently outside the rhinos’ basketball court-sized outdoor pen.
Laws in
Officially, no more than 60 horns are legally imported into
Albi Modise, spokesman for
“It became pretty clear that there seemed to be some funding from outside individuals” of Vietnamese hunters, Modise said. “We’re concerned as a department that evidently there are people who exploiting the permit system.”
But he said that rather than imposing a blanket ban on Vietnamese hunters, the department is trying to resolve its concerns through diplomatic channels. Ha Noi also has been asked to conduct inspections to make sure rhino trophies imported from
It’s impossible to track how other rhino horns are entering
In 2006, a diplomat at
In a statement, Foreign Ministry Spokesman Luong Thanh Nghi said those incidents reflected badly upon
Meanwhile, illegal rhino killings in
In Ha Noi, Vietnamese buy rhino horn on the streets of the bustling old quarter, where a traditional medicine dealer recently told the Associated Press that the average prescription costs $10.
Ha Noi doctors report that some of their clients take the powder as a supplement to western medicines, believing it cures fever and other common ailments. Others use it as a last-ditch effort against cancer.
Nguyen Huu Truong, a doctor at Ha Noi’s Center for Allergy Clinical Immunology, said a handful of patients visit him each year complaining of rashes he links to rhino horn consumption.
“Many Vietnamese believe that anything expensive is good, but if you’re going to spend a lot of money on rhino horn, you might as well bite your nails,” he said. Rhino horns are composed of keratin, a protein found in human hair and fingernails.
Giang, the young Vietnamese woman who regularly uses rhino horn to prevent hangovers, says she’s unfazed by doctors’ assessments of the substance’s efficacy and doesn’t care to know how her father acquired the horn.
Experts say some rhino horns passing through
Because Giang only takes rhino horn shots once or twice every three months, she estimates her horn will last another 10 to 15 years. But once her stash is depleted, there may not be any rhinos left on earth to satisfy her craving.
Associated Press writer Donna Bryson in



























































































