>>64499347
Liar
https://eia.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/EIA-Hanko-Report-FInal-HiRes.pdf
>In the decade before the 1989 international commercial ivory ban, from 1979-1988,. Japan imported ivory from roughly 120,000 elephants into the country, about ...
https://www.poachingfacts.com/faces-of-the-poachers/buyers-of-rhino-horn/
>This trend of buying African horn would continue for Japan, even as its suppliers changed, throughout the 1900s. By 1951 the country was the largest known consumer of rhino horn in Asia, averaging imports of 488 kilograms (1,073 pounds) each year through 1980 (page 11).
https://www.traffic.org/site/assets/files/2418/setting-suns.pdf
>Trade records suggested a substantial demand throughout the 1960s and. 1970s. Japan imported nearly 1.8 t of rhino horn in the peak year of 1973 and continued
Tigers were hunted to extinction in Korea (including by Japanese hunters) for their penises and pelts.
South China tigers and Siberian Amur tigers still live in China.
https://theconversation.com/we-asked-people-in-vietnam-why-they-use-rhino-horn-heres-what-they-said-116307
>Vietnam is one of the world’s largest consumers of rhino horn, contributing to the continued poaching of rhinos in the wild. Last year in Africa 1,100 rhinos were killed by poachers. And today there are only about 29,500 left in the world.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/jul/29/vietnam-seizes-125kg-of-smuggled-rhino-tusks-worth-75m
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/7/28/vietnam-seizes-55-pieces-of-rhino-horn-hidden-in-plaster
https://wildaid.org/ten-years-lost-the-last-javan-rhino-in-vietnam/
http://www.rhinoresourcecenter.com/pdf_files/153/1532471838.pdf
>In this first study of the trade in rhinoceros horn in Japan and South. Korea, the author examines the origins of the demand and quantifies the amount.