Artikel 1
“ Fresh wave of killings by hunters
takes Indonesian orangutan to the brink of extinction ”
Conservationists urge authorities to take action as report
finds great ape population of Kalimantan region
gravely endangered A Bornean orangutan carries her young. Between 750 and 1,800
orangutan were killed in Kalimantan in the
year ending April 2008.Conservationists have called on the Indonesian authorities
to take urgent action to save the orangutan after a report warned that the
endangered great apes were being hunted at a rate that could bring them to the
brink of extinction. Erik Meijaard, who led a team carrying out the first
attempt to assess the scale of the problem in Kalimantan, the Indonesian part
of Borneo, said the results showed that
between 750 and 1,800 orangutans were killed as a result of hunting and
deforestation in the 12 months to April 2008.SUMBER : www.google.com |
The numbers, which were higher than expected, indicated that
most orangutan populations in Kalimantan could
be in serious danger "within the foreseeable future", said Meijaard,
of the Jakarta-based People and Nature Consulting International. "At that
rate… you're talking about 10-15 years until pretty much all orangutans [in Kalimantan] are gone."
Home to 90% of the world's orangutans, Indonesia also has one of
the highest rates of deforestation – a phenomenon driven by a combination of
illegal logging, palm oil plantations and gold mining. Loss of habitat is the
main reason behind the steep decline in both the Bornean orangutan (Pongo
pygmaeus) and its critically endangered Sumatran counterpart (Pongo abelii).
The Sumatran orangutan population is believed to be less than 7,000 and has
featured on the World's 25 Most Endangered Primates list since its inception in
2000. In Borneo, an estimated 54,000
orangutans survive, half the number of 25 years ago.
Habitat
loss is compounded by hunting,
which, though anecdotally well known
as a cause of orangutan decline, has been a neglected issue. While much of the
killing documented by Meijaard and his
researchers appears to have been motivated by opportunism, with
villagers hunting for food, a significant proportion could be related to
habitat loss. "There is conflict-related hunting where you've got
plantations going in. You've got people expanding their fields and gardens and
infringing on orangutan habitat, so they
are being squeezed into smaller and smaller pockets of forest
and automatically come into contact with people more frequently," Meijaard
said.
"If you find an orangutan sitting in your garden or
eating the fruit from your fruit tree or pulling up your oil palm, the logical
reaction is either to scare it off or to kill it. That's what people do." To
tackle the fall in orangutan populations, the Indonesian authorities had to
crack down on those responsible for habitat degradation so that the Bornean
forests were "better managed", according to Meijaard. Equally
important was the need to curb the hunting of orangutans by raising awareness
of their endangered status – and enforcing the law when such hunting was found,
he said.
"So far in the entire history of orangutan conservation, I think only
two people in Indonesia
have ended up in jail because of illegal activities related to
orangutans," Meijaard said. Only days after his survey was published last
week, two Indonesian plantation workers were arrested on suspicion of killing
at least 20 orangutans and proboscis monkeys. Police said the men admitted
chasing the primates with dogs before shooting, stabbing or hacking them to
death, but claimed they were offered
money for every kill by the owners of palm oil plantations keen to reduce crop
raiding. If found guilty, the workers face up to five years in prison.
Ashley Leiman, of the London-based Orangutan Foundation,
agreed that better law enforcement must be the priority in the fight to save
the species. "There should be more awareness, there should be more
education and definitely… more enforcement," she said, accusing the
Indonesian authorities of a "very lax" approach. Leiman believed the
current laws were almost impossible to implement. "You almost have to find
people in the very act of doing it," she said.
A spokesman for the Indonesian forestry ministry has
described the report's findings as "bombastic" and said he doubted
they were true. But the hunting issue should not distract from the primary
threat of forest degradation, which was the root cause of conflict-related
hunting, said Leiman. "When you take the combination of both, the problem
is totally compounded. But it goes back to the original problem [of habitat
loss]," she said, adding that the Indonesian government needed to create
more protected areas if forest loss continued at the present rate.
Scaremongering was
counterproductive, she said. "I don't believe orangutans will be extinct.
I think as a species they will survive. They may only survive in protected
areas, and probably in smaller numbers than now, but I don't think the 'cry
wolf' [approach] is going to help."
Artikel 2
“ Illegal Orangutan Trader
Prosecuted ”
ScienceDaily (Feb. 23, 2012) — The Wildlife Conservation
Society (WCS) and the Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme (SOCP) has just
announced Sumatra's first ever successful sentence of an illegal orangutan
owner and trader in Medan, North Sumatra, Indonesia.The seven-month prison
sentence is only the third for Indonesia, despite orangutans being strictly
protected under Indonesian law since 1924.
Although
there have been over 2,500 confiscations of illegally held orangutans in
Indonesia since the early 1970's,
the first actual prosecution of an illegal orangutan owner occurred in Borneo
in 2010, and now in Sumatra with this case in
2012. The case began with the confiscation of a young male orangutan named
Julius last July in Mardinding, Karo District, in the province of North Sumatra.
The owner was allegedly trying to sell the orangutan, which was believed to be
three years old.
The
raid was conducted by the Indonesian Ministry of Forestry's Directorate-General
for Forest Protection and Nature Conservation (PHKA), working in conjunction with WCS's Wildlife Crime Unit and
the veterinarian and staff of the SOCP. The Wildlife Crime Unit, created
by WCS in 2003 and funded by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and other
donors, provides data and technical advice to law enforcement agencies to
support the investigation and prosecution of wildlife crimes.
The SOCP, implemented by the Swiss-based PanEco Foundation,
and the Indonesian NGO YEL (Foundation for a Sustainable Ecosystem) have
operated the only orangutan rescue center in Sumatra since 2001 and have so far
reintroduced over 150 confiscated ex-pet orangutans back to the wild. Julius is now being cared for at the
SOCP's orangutan quarantine center near Medan, with just over 50 other
orangutans also being prepared for a return to the forest. After spending 30
days in quarantine, Julius is now living in a socialization cage, which allows
him to adapt to the presence of other orangutans. Though the road to full
rehabilitation might still be a long one, Julius is making excellent progress
and is expected to be released back into the wild in the future.
The sentence reflects an increase in activity and action to
combat the illegal wildlife trade in Indonesia in recent years. In the
last two years there have been more than 20 arrests for illegally possessing or
trading protected wildlife, including the critically endangered Sumatran tiger
and pangolin. The prosecution is in full compliance with the Indonesian
Government's own National Orangutan Conservation Strategy and Action plan,
launched in 2007.
The majority of illegal pet orangutans are a byproduct of
forest clearance for palm oil plantations and of conflicts between farmers and
orangutans that raid crops in converted agricultural areas. In most cases, they are not hunted specifically for
food or trade in Sumatra, but are more
"refugees" from forests that no longer exist. Conservationists
believe Julius's mother was killed at the time of his capture. Relatively few orangutans are actively
traded in Sumatra, but the
SOCP and PHKA still confiscate around 30 illegal pets each year, whose mothers
have been killed.
The Head of Natural Resources Conservancy Agency (BBKSDA) North Sumatra, Arief Tongkagie, said: "Based on the
successful completion of this case, our hope is that in the future more people
will be willing to report crimes against orangutans." According to Panut,
Chairman of the Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Forum (FOKUS): "Increased
efforts to curb crimes against orangutans will provide a deterrent effect to
traders." The Wildlife Conservation Society is actively trying to reduce
the damaging impact of the illegal wildlife trade.
"We commend Indonesia's Ministry of Forestry's
Directorate-General for Forest Protection and Nature Conservation (PHKA) for
taking a hard stance on wildlife trade, which is threatening to destroy the
country's natural resources," said Dr Noviar Andayani, Director of the WCS
Indonesia Program. "We are hopeful that this prosecution sends a clear
message that illegal wildlife trade will not be tolerated in Indonesia."
Live orangutans sold in Indonesia, or exported illegally to
neighboring countries, are kept as pets or in private collections. Other
wildlife traded for food, medicines, skins, biomedical research, souvenirs and
pets from Indonesia include rhinos, elephants, tigers, birds, bears, orchids,
marine and freshwater fish, turtles, fragrant timber, pangolins, corals,
snakes, bats, sharks, and rodents.
"Working closely with law enforcement is a key
component in the fight against illegal wildlife trade," said Joe Walston,
WCS Executive Director for Asia programs.
"If governments want to protect their wildlife resources, they need to be
serious about enforcement. Clearly Indonesia is taking a lead on this
front."
Ian Singleton, Director of Conservation for the PanEco
Foundation and the person in charge of the SOCP, said: "It's absolutely
fantastic to finally have a prosecution of an illegal orangutan 'owner' in Sumatra, but it's also long overdue. With this sentence,
as long as it is widely publicized in the region, anyone considering capturing,
killing or keeping an orangutan illegally will certainly think twice about it,
and hopefully the numbers being killed and kept in the coming years will begin
to decline."
SUMBER : WWW.GOOGLE.COM
PASSIVE
VOICE
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Present
Tense
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·
Habitat
loss is compounded by hunting.
Hilangnya habitat ini diperparah oleh pemburu
·
They
are not hunted specifically for
food or trade in Sumatra, but are more "refugees" from forests that
no longer exist.
Mereka tidak diburu khusus untuk makanan atau
perdagangan di Sumatra, tetapi lebih "pengungsi" dari hutan yang tidak ada lagi
·
Relatively
few orangutans are actively traded in Sumatra.
Orangutan relatif sedikit yang aktif
diperdagangkan di Sumatera.
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Present
Perfect
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·
His
researchers appears to have been motivated
by opportunism.
Peneliti-nya tampaknya telah dimotivasi oleh oportunisme.
·
Although
there have been over 2,500
confiscations of illegally held
orangutans in Indonesia since the early 1970's.
meskipun ada lebih dari 2.500 penyitaan
orangutan ilegal diselenggarakan di Indonesia sejak awal 1970
·
The
SOCP and PHKA still confiscate around 30 illegal pets each year, whose
mothers have been killed.
Para SOCP
dan PHKA masih
menyita sekitar 30 hewan peliharaan ilegal setiap tahun, yang ibunya telah
dibunuh
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Present
Continous
|
·
They
are being squeezed into smaller
Mereka sedang diperas menjadi lebih kecil
·
Julius
is now being cared for at the SOCP's orangutan quarantine center near
Medan
Julius sekarang sedang dirawat di pusat karantina orangutan
SOCP di dekat Medan
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Past
Tense
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·
They
were offered money for every kill
by the owners of palm oil plantations keen to reduce crop raiding
Mereka ditawarkan uang untuk setiap
pembunuhan oleh pemilik perkebunan
kelapa sawit untuk mengurangi penyerang tanaman
·
The
raid was conducted by the
Indonesian Ministry of Forestry's Directorate-General for Forest Protection
and Nature Conservation (PHKA)
Serangan itu dilakukan oleh Departemen
Kehutanan Republik Indonesia Direktorat Jenderal Perlindungan Hutan dan Konservasi Alam (PHKA)
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