JP/18/MARIA2
JP/18/MARIA2
checked --JSR
More monkey business
ProAnimalia has implemented several successful programs, one of
which was started in July 2004 in Kalimantan to save wild
macaques that were being beaten to death or drowned in the river
by locals who saw them as pests for raiding their crops.
The actual call for help came from these same locals who were
worried about the effects the killings were having on their
children.
Despite being informed about the situation, ProAnimalia
director Femke den Haas was not prepared for the sight that
awaited her team at the location when they arrived: a grave full
of about 250 dead macaques.
The team went to work, making large wooden traps with holes at
the top for the macaques to enter, but from which they would not
be able to exit. The groups of monkeys were then taken to a
forested area in the same district, which was not far from where
they were, and released.
Rivers, roads and other human infrastructure prevent the
monkeys from returning to the plantations, and they can live
freely again without the threat of being killed, she said.
The funding that was needed for the program was also kept to a
minimum, she added, saying that they only needed to trap the
monkeys and provide medical care when needed, before relocating
them.
The solution offered by ProAnimalia has won praise from the
Forestry Department and the local council, which, in a meeting
held just over a month ago, called the relocation a sound
alternative to a growing problem that is affecting many parts of
the country.
"There are problems everywhere with macaques in Indonesia
and their loss of habitat, but killing them is not a solution,"
den Haas said.
-- Maria Lisa K.