Indonesian Political, Business & Finance News

Activists protest wild animal hunting, trading

| Source: JP

Activists protest wild animal hunting, trading

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta/Bogor

Around 70 activists from the organization Pro Fauna Indonesia
(Indonesian Wildlife Support) demonstrated on Wednesday at the
Hotel Indonesia traffic circle, unfurling a five meter by three
meter banner that read "Stop trade in endangered animals --
wildlife belongs to nature."

"We are holding this demonstration because we are concerned at
the increase in wild animal hunting in Indonesia," said Pro Fauna
Jakarta coordinator Hardi Baktiantoro.

Since Indonesia still topped the list in wild animal hunting
and trading, Pro Fauna demanded the Ministry of Forestry to curb
the trade in endangered species and called on the public to stop
buying them.

Hardi said every month 10 to 20 orangutans were smuggled from
Kalimantan to Semarang seaport and later distributed to
Yogyakarta, Surabaya and Bali.

A member of Pro Fauna in Gorontalo, Sulawesi, reported that
the capture of babirusa (Babyrousa babyrussa) was widespread,
already occurring in Nani Wartabone Bogani National Park, with an
estimated 10 babirusa being caught every week and sold in Manado,
North Sulawesi.

"If the government does not take action, within five to 10
years, Indonesia will lose its endangered animals," said Hardi.

Illegal animal traders only get lenient sentence from the
court although they are proven guilty.

In a recent trial at the Bogor District Court on Monday,
defendant Rudi Hermawan, 27, was only sentenced to six months'
jail although he was found guilty of rare animal trading, which
violated Law No. 5/1990 on natural resources and biodiversity
conservation.

The charges carry a punishment of a maximum of five years'
jail and a Rp 100 million (US$11,765) fine.

The prosecutors had demanded 10 months' jail.

The defendant was arrested in a joint action by the Bogor
Forest Police and East Bogor Police on Nov. 5, 2003, outside the
Trio restaurant on Jl. Raya Pajajaran, Bogor, at about 9:30 p.m.
when he tried to sell a dead Sumatran tiger for Rp 12 million to
Yayat Syarif Hidayat.

Rudi claimed he bought it from another man, Amir, who is still
at large, for Rp 6.5 million. Amir remains on the Bogor Police's
wanted list.

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