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8 jailed for logging, selling wild yews in E China
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-08-25 21:14 HANGZHOU: Eight men in east China's Zhejiang province were jailed for illegally logging and selling eight wild yews under national key protection, a local court ruling said Tuesday. Under the leadership of a man surnamed Chen, they allegedly logged and sold eight wild Taxus chinensis, a species of yew, or Chinese yew, from September 2005 to August 2008, said a ruling issued by Longquan Municipal People's Court.
Logging the Chinese yew was permissible only with approval from forestry authorities and felling more than five Chinese yews was a major crime, the ruling said. The Taxus chinensis is an endangered plant which has existed for 2.5 million years. It produces few seeds and survives only in warm, moist areas. Large numbers of the tree have been felled to extract taxol, which is used to treat breast, lung and ovarian cancers. A gram of taxol is worth more than US$200,000. |