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The Jakarta Post
Saturday, May 31, 2008
Source: The Jakarta Post - May 31, 2008 Apriadi Gunawan, The Jakarta
Post, Medan
Non-governmental organizations have accused the police and military
of systematic involvement in illegal trading of endangered species
in northern Sumatra.
They said that police and military officers were involved in the
transportation of animals such as the Sumatran tiger and anteater
found in protected forests in Riau, North Sumatra and Aceh, via
Medan and on to other countries.
A. Ridho, a spokesman for the NGOs -- the In ternational Leuser
Foundation, Flora Fauna International, Leuser Ecosystem Foundation,
Conservation International and Sumatra Orangutan Conservation
Program -- said that transporting the animals was impossible without
escort by security authorities.
He mentioned the arrest last week of an Army sergeant major in Tiga
Binanga, Karo regency, while escorting a consignment of Sumatran
tiger skins to Medan, believed to be poached from the Leuser
National Park in Aceh.
"Investigating police said the tiger skins were to be supplied to a
local trader in Tiga Binanga for Rp 13 million each," he said, but
this was foiled by local police with help from the general public.
Ridho added that NGOs have detected the long-term involvement of
security officers in the illegal trade. "But it has been very
difficult to arrest them because they are powerful," he said.
He said the Sumatran tiger was found in the Leuser National Park but
the population has drastically fallen.
He said the seaports of Belawan and Tanjung Balai were believed to
be used to take tiger skins and parts out of the country to the
international market.
Fitri, a staff member of the Natural Resources Conservation Center,
agreed and said there were many hidden tracks in Belawan and Tanjung
Balai which could be used to bring the endangered tigers to Malaysia
and Singapore.
The intensive poaching of endangered species in Sumatra is prompted
by high demand in the international market, Fitri said, "And we are
running short of staff to supervise the protected forests which have
been their habitats."
WWF has frequently reported on the prevalent poaching of the
Sumatran tiger to the annual meeting of the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species, representing key wildlife
protection stakeholders, but the trade has persisted due to
increased demand in Southeast Asia for skins and parts. It is
thought that at least 66 Sumatran tigers have been killed in the
last two years.
The tiger trade is flourishing in countries like Indonesia,
Cambodia, Vietnam, Myanmar and Laos. Local laws have been
established to protect the animals but are not effectively enforced,
the WWF said.
Over the past 100 years, tiger numbers have dwindled. At the start
of the 20th century more than 100,000 wild tigers roamed the Earth.
Now with poaching decimating their numbers and extensive logging
destroying their habitat, fewer than 7,500 remain. Environmentalists
fear that by the end of this century, no tigers will remain in the
wild. |