Photo/ CAK

Nairobi, Kenya: In September 2022, a senior Kenyan police officer was arrested when he was found with 13.5 tonnes of sandalwood, worth roughly $430 270, loaded into police vehicles in his compound in Wamba town, Samburu East. He was charged with being in possession of endangered species contrary to section 94(4) of the Wildlife Conservation and Management Act 2013 at the Kahawa Law Courts in Nairobi. Two police drivers were charged with the same offence.

The confiscated wood was destroyed in a public burning on 28 February, as per Kenyan law. This was confirmed by Kenya’s Cabinet Secretary of the Ministry of Environment, Climate Change and Forestry, Soipan Tuya

“We need to look at our environmental crimes. How deterrent are they? Because when you see the wanton destruction of our forests and the various ecosystems including wetlands we need to look at the deterrent effect” says CS Soipan.

Adding “We need to do sensitization of Kenyan to know that destroying our environment is a life and death” says CS Soipan.

The East African sandalwood tree was listed in Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora in 2013 due to over-harvesting. The illicit sandalwood trade from East Africa is a multi-billion-dollar industry that seeks to meet the increasing global demand for sandalwood oil used to manufacture perfumes and cosmetics.

The arrests and prosecution of the Kenya Police Service members point to the entrenched nature of sandalwood trafficking syndicates and their power to use government offices and resources to facilitate crime.