COLOMBO: Sri Lankan custom officers today destroyed 45 kilogrammes of rare bird nests that are considered a delicacy in China and have a street value of nearly half a million dollars.
The officers burnt the pile of swallows’ nests confiscated mainly from passengers’ airport luggage and postal parcels intended for overseas delivery over the past four years.
“We destroyed this stock to demonstrate our commitment to protect endangered species,” customs spokesman Dharmasena Kahandawa. “There may be a street value of up to US$10,000 (RM41,946) for a kilo of birds’ nests, but for us it has no value at all because this is an illegal trade.”
Another 40 kilogrammes of feathers from exotic birds and other animal parts used in Chinese medicine were also destroyed today, together with the edible nests, at a Colombo cemetery’s crematorium.
The nests are the main ingredient in bird’s nest soup, considered a delicacy in China and other Asian countries. But removing, owning or exporting birds is outlawed under Sri Lanka’s strict flora and fauna regulations.
The cup-shaped collections of twigs are held together by dried swiftlet saliva, which is made into a gelatinous soup credited in China with everything from alleviating asthma to arresting the ageing process.
In January Sri Lankan customs officers publicly destroyed the country’s biggest ever illegal ivory haul more than 350 tusks weighing about 1.5 tonnes in what officials said was an attempt to show poachers that the island would not tolerate the illegal trade.






