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Archive for May, 2007

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Kuala Lumpur and Jakarta in pro-palm oil battle (yeah, right!)

Saturday, May 26th, 2007

By STEPHEN THEN

MIRI: Malaysia and Indonesia have agreed on a comprehensive action plan to counter anti-palm oil activists in Europe and North America who are getting increasingly aggressive and deceitful.

Both countries agreed to jointly tackle the growing anti-palm oil campaigns in the Western world.

The agreement was reached following a meeting between Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister Datuk Peter Chin Fah Kui and Indonesian Agriculture Minister Dr Anton Apriyantono as well as senior officials from their respective ministries in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.

Dr Anton was in Malaysia for the second joint Malaysia-Indonesia meeting on bilateral cooperation on commodities.

“These anti-palm oil campaigns affect both Malaysia and Indonesia because we are the main producers in the world market,” Chin told The Star in a tele-interview here after his meeting with Dr Anton.

“These campaigns are spreading very fast. Those behind such campaigns are resorting to lies and distorting issues.

“They are no more just saying that palm oil is harmful to health. They are telling the Western world that Malaysia and Indonesia are ravaging the forests and committing genocide against animals, particularly the orang utans because of our oil palm projects.

“These activists are harping on issues that are sensitive to the Western population, They want to stir up emotions so that consumers there would boycott our palm oil and the downstream products.

“Their campaigns are getting widespread, affecting restaurants, supermarkets, food outlets and households throughout Europe and North America.

“We (his ministry and the Indonesian Agriculture Ministry) will be carrying out a series of campaigns of our own in cities in Europe and North America to show the people there that we do not destroy our forests or kill animals in our development of oil palm projects.

“We will show them proof that we carry out our projects in an eco-friendly manner,” he said.

Chin said his ministry and Dr Anton’s ministry would conduct seminars, talks and roadshows in Britain and the European continent, and meet Western business groups and government bodies to show them the true picture.

On a related matter, Chin clarified a report in The Star yesterday that the RM70bil in income was the ministry’s expected revenue from exporting all types of commodities and not just from palm oil.

“Palm oil export will bring in about RM30bil out of the RM70bil. Palm oil export last year was about RM26bil, so the increase expected for this year will be about RM4bil,” he added.

Source: http://thestar.com.my

The ‘Mother’ of Orangutans from Nyaru Menteng

Saturday, May 26th, 2007

“Please be careful, don’t let the boat get too close to the trees. The orang-utans certainly seem fine. But, if they become angry again, they can suddenly jump from the trees above onto the boat”

The soft voice of May Sumarnae (29) at that very moment lessened the sense of adventure of Andri and Rustan for taking photos even closer. The boat which was carrying camera operators from private television networks in Jakarta was pushed back from under the trees.
In the trees above, simultaneously as the warning from May Sumarnae was given, a male orangutan suddenly displayed unfriendly behaviour. His sharp gaze to the people below seemed like a warning to the two men to move away from the female orang-utans who were in the middle of enjoying breakfast from the staff of the Nyaru Menteng Orang-utan Reintroduction Centre, Palangkaraya, Central Kalimantan.

May is certainly not an eye-catching person amongst the 300 staff at the orangutan rehabilitation centre Nyaru Menteng, which is run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOS), Central Kalimantan. Before working in the communication section at Nyaru Menteng, May was a carer for baby orangutans which needed special care after being neglected.

Baby or infant orangutans which are in Nyaru Menteng rehabilitation centre, certainly need a lot of attention. Generally, the babies and infants which receive special care have had hard times, because many of their mothers were killed by humans.Either these orangutans have been confiscated from persons, who kept them illegally, or they were rescued from the ever expanding palm oil plantations.

Since 2002, May, a Dayak girl from the Kapuas regency in Kalimantan, has lived in a village of Sei Gohong. She began her career as a sitter of baby orangutans, and over the last 5 years has truly plunged herself into the middle of orangutan rehabilitation activities at the BOS orangutan reintroduction centre Nyaru Menteng.

“This work is very rewarding” said May, who graduated from the Department of Forestry, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Palangkaraya in 2001.

A Few Stories

May was born as a Dayak from the Kapuas regency in Central Kalimantan, and proud to be one. Since she was small, May had become accustomed to the forest and lived according to nature and in balance with the natural environment. In an administrative sense, the Sei Gohong village is a part of the Palangkaraya city region, but in reality it is quite far from the bustle of the city. The needs of the village where May and her parents Herson (53) and Beda (48) live, are still met by the dense rainforest.

When she was small, the sounds of the animals were very close to her, including the calls of the orang-utans. Furthermore, the orang-utan rehabilitation centre at Nyaru Menteng was only a few kilometres from her village. Because of this proximity to her home, May had the opportunity to join in the BOS efforts at Nyarumenteng which made her happy.

The job as a babysitter for infant orangutans requires patience and understanding. During a year as a caregiver, May experienced many ups and downs. An unusual experience which she had was the time BOS at Nyaru Menteng received a baby orangutan from a confiscation, which was later on called Micky.

“The condition of Micky was very sad. He was very sick,” said May concerning the event of 5 years ago.

For the sake of Micky’s health, May even slept at the orangutan rehabilitation centre for 11 days. During this time she didn’t even go home to Sei Gohong because Micky’s conditions was instable due to constant diarrhoea. Not only this, later on it was found out that Micky’s illness had already attacked his central nervous system. Although his physical condition could be restored, his motor skills would not develop fully.

Seeing the reality which had struck down her ‘adopted child’, May admitted that she was depressed. Although, Micky was already two years old, his capabilities were very much limited compared to other orangutans the same age. It meant that there was little possibility for Micky to enjoy a normal life in the wild in his original habitat.

May’s love for orangutans and her closeness to all the ‘adopted children’ at Nyaru Menteng is clear to see when she plays with Suriyani (2), Julius (2.5) and Kahim (3). Suriyani who is mollycoddled always wishes to be carried by May.

“We began to nurse Suriyani since she was six months old. She came from a confiscation in Kuala Pembuang in the regency of Seruyan. When we first picked her up, Suriyani was afraid. Her condition wasn’t that good because she had always been kept in a cage,” said May. Now, entering her second year, Suriyani has become clever climbing trees.

May is happy when orangutans under her care begin to display progress in the behavior of wild orangutans. Climbing trees, searching for their own food and making nests and shelters from small branches and foliage are all skills orangutans need to survive in the wild.

Because of that, says May, after having the basic skills mentioned above, orangutans are ready to enter the last stage of their rehabilitation. On Palas, Kaja and Hampapak islands, they receive further lessons learning how to socialise in the wild.

“Here, step by step, they are allowed to live alone without assistance. This step is very important” said May. In the same manner as shown in the documentary film The Story of Rimba which ‘features’ May. She points out “the forest does not forgive the dwellers of tall trees who do not have the skills”.

When the orangutans who had become “her adopted children” are set free, May is sad and proud. “Sad because we have to part, but proud also. If we manage to release orangutans into the wild, it means that there is still forest left. Additionally, that forest will be protected” said May.

Source: http://www.kompas.co.id/kompas-cetak/0705/10/Sosok/3523227.htm

BOS Nyaru Menteng Slideshow

Saturday, May 26th, 2007

This slideshow comes from a Danish news website and offers astonishing photos highlighting the work of Lone Droscher Nielsen and the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation’s Nyaru Menteng Project.

PLEASE NOTE SOME IMAGES ARE VERY GRAPHIC

http://ekstrabladet.dk/gallerier/nyheder/article300497.ece#15

An appeal from Dr. Willie Smits: Sponsors needed

Friday, May 25th, 2007

Dear Friends of BOS,

Greetings from Samboja Lestari! Every time I come here this new forest gives as much energy back as BOS has put in it. So green, so lush, so thriving with life. We are also very happy that slowly more people hear about the Samboja Lodge and take up the opportunity to visit us and stay and work with us. Through them and our friends around the world we hope that we can get support for some urgent needs for more facilities for the increasing number of orangutans in Samboja Lestari and I wonder if some of you could help us.

First of all we have moved the orangutan baby playground materials from the old location in Wanariset to Samboja Lestari and they love it. But for the smallest ones we do not yet have a baby-house where they can spend the night, so they still mostly have to stay with our babysitters at home, which is not an ideal situation. We have made a design for a small facility that can sleep 25 orangutan babies and has facilities for round the clock care for the smallest inhabitants of Samboja Lestari. The building with cages, kitchen, bathroom, medical care room and small shed would be built at a stone throw distance from the playground and the play forest for the smallest ones and connected by a concrete path to the orangutan clinic at a mere 100 meters away. This facility, including the electrical wiring and plumbing will cost about 215 Million Rupiah (approx. 24,500 USD; 18,200 EUR).

We also have a growing number of orangutans that cannot be released yet which we would like to get out of the (spacious) cages on islands. Next year we hope to start the construction of a big dam in Samboja Lestari for the water project which will create several islands, but for now we would like to add one more island of almost a hectare beneath the ecolodge location. It is our intention to build this island by digging a new waterway that will create an island bordering islands 1, 2 and 3 to the south. The digging we hope to do by hand and with volunteers visiting the Samboja Lodge. On the new island we will construct many enrichment and climbing facilities for the orangutans, plant lots of interesting plants and trees and create some visual barriers to enhance the surprise effects for the orangutans. The work again we hope will all be done by volunteers but we will need a big quantity of materials like rocks, sand, gravel and concrete for the sides of the island and the landside part, but also things like thick ship ropes, rubber nets, concrete shelters, swinging beams, remote controlled boxes, some digging and soil moving equipment, plants, etc. Our preliminary calculation (it will partly depend upon the creativity of the volunteers in inventing interesting options for the future orangutan inhabitants) is that it will cost about 175 Million Rupiah in materials only to construct (approx. 20,000 USD; 14,800 EUR). The sponsor will be given the right to name the new island!

If there are interested persons or parties or if you know someone that might be interested we would love to hear from you. Of course you will get full reports on the projects and the expenditures and we hope you will come to open the facilities yourself.

Very warm wishes from a growing Samboja.

Dr.Ir. Willie Smits

Samboja Lestari, 19-5-2007

Southeast Asia’s climate-change challenge

Friday, May 25th, 2007

Source: 2007 Asia Times Online Ltd
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/IE26Ae01.html

By Andrew Symon

SINGAPORE - Southeast Asia is possibly one of the most vulnerable areas in the global-climate-change scenarios now being put forward by scientists. Many of the region’s estimated 500 million people live in either low-lying river deltas or far-flung islands that will be inundated if waters rise significantly.

Some idea of the damage that climate change could cause over time was witnessed in the tsunami that inundated and destroyed coastal settlements on Indonesia’s Sumatra island in December 2004. While the tsunami was a sudden shock that came without warning, it gave a geographic perspective to what could be anticipated under model scenarios of a more gradual increase in sea and river-delta water levels caused by climate change.

The international climate-change spotlight has not yet fallen on Southeast Asia. With the key question now being addressed - what will succeed the present Kyoto Accord when it expires in 2012 - attention is focused more on the industrializing giants - China, India and Brazil - and how they should be incorporated under a successor framework. But Southeast Asia’s 500 million people arguably should not be overlooked.

To date, concern and debate over greenhouse-gas emission and climate change remain muted in Southeast Asia. Eight countries in the region, namely Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam, have ratified the 1997 Kyoto Accord to the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

Landlocked Laos has not, nor has the tiny petroleum-rich Islamic sultanate of Brunei. As developing countries - including Singapore, which retains this status formally in international organizations despite its developed-world per capita income - none face any mandatory obligations to reduce gases that contribute to the so-called greenhouse effect, the trapping of the sun’s heat within the atmosphere.

The region can take advantage of the Kyoto Accord’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), whereby developed countries having to meet targets under Kyoto can gain credits by funding projects in non-compliance countries that reduce greenhouse emissions. But as of mid-November 2006, of the 173 CDM projects established or seeking registration in East Asia, 70% were in India, 14% in China and only 12% in Southeast Asia.

Despite Kyoto and the climate-change debate elsewhere, energy production and consumption in Southeast Asia remain business as usual. Individual governments and the regional Association of Southeast Asian Nations often make assertions about the desirability of greater energy efficiency, cleaner energy technologies and greater reliance on renewables. But at the moment there is no major departure from the region’s 1990s trends in energy use.

The Singaporean government appears to be positioning itself for what it must see as the need for greater regional efforts over climate change. After ratifying Kyoto late last year, Singapore recently announced a new program to promote research and development, test-bedding and undertaking pilot projects in clean energy on the island.

These would potentially have applications elsewhere. Underlying Singapore’s new enthusiasm for clean energy is a week of government-endorsed conferences on biofuels, carbon trading, and finance for renewable energy, as well as an industry exhibition, Sustainable Energy Asia, to be held on June 12-15.

Public concern in the region is not especially strong compared with the situation in, say, Western Europe, the United States and Australia (even though the latter two countries are not signatories to the Kyoto Accord). The public focus on the issues varies from country to country. In Thailand, for example, community and non-governmental opposition to plans to build coal-fired power plants have historically been strong, forcing the government to postpone projects indefinitely in 2002.

The smog ahead

Yet projections by the Asia-Pacific Energy Research Center (APERC) in Tokyo, a body operating under the auspices of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum, show a fourfold increase in total carbon-dioxide emissions - the major greenhouse gas - from 2002 to 2030 produced by energy production and consumption in Southeast Asia.

The total will be twice that of Japan in 2030, nearly a third of the US total, and a quarter that of China (China and the US will be the world’s largest and second-largest emitters of greenhouse gases in 2030). Note, though, that these projections in APERC’s 2006 APEC Energy Demand and Supply Outlook, Projections to 2030, assume no major departure from existing energy production and consumption patterns as a result of policies on greenhouse gases and climate change.

One major Southeast Asia-related negative impact on international greenhouse-gas reduction efforts comes from the ongoing destruction of the region’s forests and jungles, especially in Indonesia’s Kalimantan and Sumatra, in the Malaysian states of Sarawak and Sabah on Borneo island, and in the Mekong region in the mountains in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, as well as in Myanmar and Thailand. Southeast Asia’s extensive wet rice agriculture also results in the release of another greenhouse gas, methane.

There are also increasing efforts both commercially and promoted by government to develop and expand biofuel production - bio-diesel from palm oil is especially favored. This drive has been sparked by both high global petroleum prices and the region’s increasing reliance on petroleum imports, particularly from the Middle East.

Although biofuel is often pitched as a sustainable energy source, there is concern that the rush to develop it results or will result in more destruction of old forests to clear the way for oil-palm plantations. The large-scale expansion of palm-oil production in Indonesia’s Sumatra and in Kalimantan on Borneo, which has been ongoing for the past decade, is already responsible for another major environmental problem - the haze that affects Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia when land is burned to prepare for clearing.

There is a regional shift under way toward more natural gas, which is desirable in terms of its lower carbon-dioxide emissions, though it is sometimes forgotten that upstream production often releases carbon dioxide unless engineering measures are taken to re-inject the gas. And natural gas continues to face obstacles due to delays in constructing pipelines.

Moreover, gas will no time soon replace cheap but greenhouse-gas-emitting coal in the region. Coal-fired generation is planned to grow fast in Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam. More hydropower is likely to be used, especially in the Mekong region, but again there are environmental concerns as to the impact of damming rivers on downstream river life and communities vulnerable to drought.

Vietnam in particular is finding this a major problem, with exceptionally dry seasons in the past two or three years leading to low water levels in reservoirs behind hydro dams in the north. There has been competition between supply for farmers downriver for rice irrigation and for power generation. This in turn has made Vietnam’s power planners look to coal-fired generation as well as natural gas as means of reducing reliance on hydropower.

Nuclear power has also emerged in the past 18 months or so as a serious possibility in several countries. Vietnam and Indonesia propose large-capacity generation plants, possibly coming into operation at the end of the next decade. And most recently, the governments of Thailand and Myanmar have put forward the idea. Again, there are many issues here, ranging from whether the plants would really be economic to safety and weapons-proliferation concerns.

Motor vehicles - another major source of carbon-dioxide emissions - are set to keep filling Southeast Asia’s roads. In per capita terms, car ownership is still low. But at the same time, in large urban areas, growing car ownership continues to congest cities and harm the atmosphere and community health through vehicle exhaust. Better public-transport systems - from buses to rail overhead and underground systems - are clearly critical but are generally only planned for the region’s more affluent countries.

Emission analysis

Not all the news is bad, however. For instance, Singapore has for decades been exemplary in its attention to urban planning and mass transport, including extensive use of greenbelts and tree-lined gardens. Bangkok, notorious in the past for traffic jams and exhaust pollution, is also now benefiting from its light rail and more recent underground rail system, as well as stricter standards and controls on gasoline quality. In Vietnam, the fastest-growing economy in the region, there are plans for mass-transit systems for the large and fast-growing cities of Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh. Whether they can be put in place ahead of the expected huge growth in vehicle numbers remains to be seen, however.

Southeast Asia, which justifiably prides itself on the great progress the region has made in terms of both political stability and economic development since the late 1970s, still faces many pressing socioeconomic challenges. As such, concerns over greenhouse-gas emission and climate change do not yet seem as pressing as they are now in the developed world.

Southeast Asia’s defenders will point - and rightly so - to the region’s low per capita emissions of carbon dioxide. And over the medium term, these will still be low compared with the developed world. By 2030, APERC projects 4.2 tons per capita in Southeast Asia, compared with 6.7 in China, 10.8 in Japan, 21.9 in Australia and 23.0 in the United States. These low per capita figures are consistent with still low per capita income levels compared with more developed countries, apart from China.

The popular argument is - and will continue to be - that Southeast Asia’s economic development should not be penalized through a disproportionate burden of greenhouse-gas reduction measures. Further strengthening this perspective is the fact that much of the atmosphere’s existing carbon-dioxide content has been produced by the West and Japan over the past century. This also points to another problem with carbon-dioxide mitigation: it can take a century or more for carbon dioxide to break down naturally.

However, the comparison of per capita output on a national basis is arguably not sufficiently focused. Looking at national averages does not give a sharp enough picture of energy-use patterns and how they might be improved. When comparing major urban areas, say Bangkok or Jakarta, with comparable cities in the developed world, the per capita emission figures in many cases are not that different. Singapore is a case and point. Its per capita carbon-dioxide output was a high 12.2 tons in 2002 and is projected by APERC to reach 18.8 tons by 2030.

Future analysis would be better based on scientific and economic geography rather than nation-states - although national governments clearly remain critical and indispensable as far as policy development and implementation are concerned. This in turn points to Southeast Asia’s particular greenhouse-gas challenges.

Energy use by the region’s cities is often extravagant and wasteful, which could be improved through better building design, electrical-product standards, and transport systems. Set against this are rural areas where millions of people live in virtual energy poverty with little or no access to electricity. Hence Southeast Asia faces the unique global-warming challenge of both the modern urbanized and industrialized world and the agriculture-based developing world. And it is increasingly important that it is addressed as such.

Andrew Symon is a Singapore-based journalist and analyst specializing in energy and natural resources. He is currently completing a book on energy in Southeast Asia.

Source: 2007 Asia Times Online Ltd
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/IE26Ae01.html

Indonesia seeks deal on wildlife

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007

By Lucy Williamson
BBC News, Jakarta

Indonesia is urging its neighbours to unite in a regional effort to combat the illegal wildlife trade.

It is hosting a meeting of ministers from the 10 members of the Association of South-East Asian Nations (Asean) to discuss the trade. The meeting is the second of Asean’s Wildlife Law Enforcement Network.

It was set up in 2005 to fight the illegal exploitation and sale of fauna and flora from some of the world’s most important wildlife habitats.

Indonesia has something to offer this conference and it wants something in return as well. Its wildlife protection laws are some of the best in the region, it says, and can serve as a reference for other countries. But the problem lies in enforcing those regulations.

The meeting is designed to promote co-operation between countries and international bodies such as Interpol to stop the illegal trade in animals.

According to the environmental group ProFauna, more than 95% of the animals sold in markets here are taken directly from the wild, with rare endangered species fetching the highest prices.

Officials say the illegal animal trade in Indonesia was worth more than $16m (£8m) in 2005, and many environmentalists believe that trade is growing in line with illegal logging of the country’s forests.

Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/asia-pacific/6676427.stm

Published: 2007/05/21 10:36:41 GMT

Southeast Asia seeks to crack down on animal trade

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007

JAKARTA, May 23 (Reuters) - Southeast Asian nations plan to set up task forces to help fight the illegal animal trade in a region that is home to many endangered species, an Indonesian forestry official said on Wednesday.

Conservation groups welcomed the plan, but said the problem appeared to be getting worse and urgent action was needed.

Police, customs and forestry officials from the 10-member Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) are meeting in the Indonesian city of Bogor south of Jakarta to discuss the issue.

“There are ongoing talks about joint investigation efforts, information-sharing mechanisms and the possible use of facilities in certain countries for investigation and enforcement,” Agus Joko, an official at the Indonesian foreign ministry, said by telephone.

The meeting was expected to finalise plans to set up inter-agency crime task forces that would eventually be given enforcement powers, he said.

“We are working towards joint enforcement but I think we are still a couple years away from that.”

Authorities in the region, which is home to some of the last untouched rainforests in the world, have uncovered cases of smuggled animals ranging from endangered orangutans to pangolins and cockatoos.

Orangutans have a price tag of $50,000 and mostly end up in the homes of collectors in countries where law enforcement in weak such as Cambodia or the Philippines, according to conservationist Hardi Baktiantoro.

The Middle East is currently the top destination for illegal wildlife trade as rich people like to flaunt their wealth and power by keeping endangered animals as pets.

Asep Purnama of Indonesian conservation group ProFauna said that based on monitoring at entry points for animal smugglers in places such as Sumatra and Bali the problem was getting worse.

“The quantity of illegal species traded has gone up, as well the variety of species traded,” Purnama said, adding that establishing wildlife crime task forces could help overcome squabbles between different agencies working on the issue.

Another conservation official said he thought the scale of the problem was greatly underestimated.

“Any numbers would only show the tip of the iceberg,” Khairul Saleh of WWF Indonesia said.

Source: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/JAK252664.htm

Orangutan sight restored in first ever Ape cataract op

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007

117629-orangutan.jpgVolunteers on Real Gap’s Orangutan Experience volunteer programme in Malaysia had an unexpected treat last week when they witnessed the world’s first ever cataract operation performed on an orangutan.

19 year old Aman, a dominant male, is the first orangutan in the world to undergo bilateral cataract surgery. He had been virtually blind for 10 years after developing cataracts in both eyes.

After the three hour long surgery last week (undertaken by the local coalition conservation initiative, the Great Orangutan Project), Aman’s operation was pronounced a success and has brought his rehabilitation into the wild a step closer. He will now be able to see his children for the first time. Specialist animal ophthalmologist Dr Izak Venter from South Africa declared “Aman has clearly regained the use of his sight and will be suitable for return to his usual activities.” Aman is now enjoying post- operative animal care at the Matang Wildlife Centre in Sarawak, Malaysia.

“Volunteers have made all the improvements at this wildlife centre other orangutan sites possible. It is their donations; hard work and dedication that drive the project forward and give orangutans in this part of the world a great chance of survival” commented Guillaume Feldman Project Director of the Great Orangutan Project. “This is a leading example of how orangutan custodians, from charities to volunteer companies to individuals, can share a common vision and put their conservation debates to one side and get on and save the species from the brink of extinction.”

The charity ‘Orangutan Appeal UK’ funded all ancillary costs of the operation, and Real Gap sends volunteers to Malaysia on the Orangutan Volunteer Experience. Volunteers on this programme have the unique opportunity to spend some time at the Matang Orangutan Wildlife Conservation Centre, as well as working closely with Orangutans in a Malaysian Zoo, and monitoring great apes in the wild in the Borneo jungle.

Source: http://www.easier.com/view/Travel/Travel_Guides/article-117629.html

Orangutan rescue sanctuary in need of saving

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007

On June 10 (8 PM, EST), Animal Planet will air Orangutan Diaries, a documentary highlighting the work of Nyaru Menteng, an orangutan sanctuary that faces closure due to lack of funding. The World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA) and animal lover Michaela Strachan have launched an appeal to secure the fate of the hundreds of rescued orangutans by funding the sanctuary in Borneo, Indonesia.

The sanctuary, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOS), rehabilitates rescued orphaned orangutans for release back into the wild. It is now in dire need of funding and WSPA hopes its supporters will help raise the 2 million dollars needed to run the sanctuary until more sustainable funds can be found.

BBC wildlife presenter and WSPA supporter, Michaela Strachan said: “I was shocked by how desperate the situation for orangutans has become in Borneo, with more and more orangutans arriving everyday. The sanctuary is desperately short of money, closure will now become a reality unless we step in and help right now.”

WSPA’s Head of Wildlife, David Eastham added: “The Indonesian government simply doesn’t have the funds to carry on the sanctuary’s work, so conditions could become unbearably crowded and stressful. If the cycle of rehabilitation and release doesn’t continue, the opportunity to save more orangutans could be lost.”

The sanctuary rescues young orangutans that have been orphaned because of Indonesia’s growing palm oil industry, which has meant their forest home is now being burnt to the ground to make way for oil-palm plantations.

WSPA works in alliance with animal welfare organizations, like BOS, around the world to create an animal welfare movement and support local initiatives. Through direct field work, campaigning, legislative work, education and training programs, WSPA strives to create a world where animal welfare matters and animal cruelty ends.

Source: http://www.wspa-usa.org/

Orangutan population on brink of extinction

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007

Putussibau, West Kalimantan (ANTARA News) - Orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus pygmaeus) population in the Betung Kerihun National Park (TNBK) is on the brink of extinction due to poaching and illegal logging activities.

Species Officer of the WWF-Indonesia’s Putussibau office Albertus Tjiu said that illegal logging activities had pushed orangutan further into the jungle.

“The latest issue threatening the orangutan habitat in Kapuas Hulu district is the planned opening off oilpalm plantation. Investors are eyeing forest areas along the 805-km long river in the border area,” Albertus Tjiu said Wednesday.

The human encroachment would threaten the habitat of orangutans, which might approach human settlement areas, he said.

“The next threat will be orangutan hunting with many excuses, such as for the needs of meat, just for hobby or trading,? he said.

According to the 2004 data based on the Orangutan Population and Habitat Viability Assessment, the population of Pongo pygmaeus pygmaeus was 7,936 heads, (14,10 percent of the total population of orangutan species), Pongo pygmaeus morio 15,406 heads (27,40 percent), and Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii 32,906 heads (58,50 percent), he said.

A research expedition in the Kerihun Betung National Park, Sibau and Embaloh, showed that most of the orangutans lived outside the national park, namely in the protected forests and industrial forests.

Source: http://www.antara.co.id/

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