Fourteen orangutans smuggled into Thailand illegally were sent back to Indonesia
on Thursday, but the operation was not without incident -- one of the
powerful apes tore a wildlife officer's finger off when he tried to put
them in cages.
Twelve of the orangutans were
smuggled into Thailand as babies and rescued seven years ago by police
and sent to a wildlife breeding center in Ratchaburi, 80 kms (50 miles) west of Bangkok. Two of the great apes were born at the centre.
"The animals were still babies when we got them and they should have been sent back right away," Edwin Wiek, director of Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand told Reuters. "Now it's too late for them to go back to the wild."
Documents
from Thailand's Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant
Conversation said the orangutans originated from the island of Borneo in Indonesia.
The
illegal trade in endangered orangutans sees the great apes poached from
Indonesian forests for food, to obtain infants for the domestic and
international pet trade, or for traditional medicine. Between 2006 and
2007, Thailand returned 52 smuggled orangutans to Indonesia.
The latest apes to be sent back to Indonesia were sent to Bangkok's international Don Muang airport on Wednesday and put in cages ahead of their five hour journey to Jakarta, a department statement said.
One
tore an officer's finger off when he tried to put them in cages, the
department said. Around five years of age, an orangutan has the strength
of an adult male human, and by maturity will be as strong as five to
seven adult male humans.
The orangutans will spend
60 days in quarantine at a Jakarta safari park and will be moved to a
rescue center in Borneo, home to 2,000 orangutans.
Comments
Post a Comment