http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2006/11/16/apworld/20061116114312&sec=apworld


Orangutans in losing battle with slash-and-burn Indonesian farmers



MANTANGAI, Indonesia (AP): With smoke from nearby forest fires stinging his 
eyes, the conservationist aims his tranquilizer dart at the orangutan high in 
the Borneo jungle. After several misses he manages to knock her out.  

Rescuers lower the giant, red-haired beast with ropes and take her to a reserve 
-- temporarily safe from slash-and-burn land-clearing, poachers and 
machete-wielding farmers who are killing around 1,000 apes a year, said Hardi 
Baktiantoro of the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation.  

Southeast Asia's Sumatra and Borneo islands are the orangutans' last homes, and 
environmentalists say the estimated 60,000 animals remaining could disappear 
from the wild within the next decade.  

Hundreds of fires set annually by Indonesian farmers, plantation owners and 
palm oil companies are speeding things along, they say.  

This year's blazes are some of the worst in 10 years and have sent a thick, 
choking haze over much of the region, especially Indonesia's Sumatra island and 
Borneo -- which is shared by Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei.  

"The fires are out of control,'' said Baktiantoro, after teams of rescuers 
trudged for hours through the jungle in search of primates needing help, a task 
made harder by visibility of less than 100 meters (yards).  

The sun burns orange in a gray sky, smoke fills the nose, irritates the throat 
and stings the eyes.  

"We believe we have lost more orangutans than before,'' said Baktiantoro, who 
like many Indonesians uses one name.  

An estimated 800,000 hectares (2 million acres) has been torched on Borneo this 
year, according to Walhi, an environmental group. This drives apes into 
plantations in search of food, and farmers fight them off with machetes, clubs 
and guns.  

"Sometimes they destroy acres of land and eat hundreds of buds,'' said Muji 
Harto, a palm oil worker in Lamandau district in Central Kalimantan province. 
"We know they're endangered and protected. But what else can we do?''  

The small-time farmers say the real culprits are the big palm oil plantation 
companies, which they say burn forest on a large scale and are responsible for 
most of the haze. Encounters between humans and orangutans -- which comes from 
the Indonesian and Malay words "man of the jungle'' -- are often horrific.  

Most of the 45 orangutans rescued and taken for medical treatment in Borneo in 
recent weeks have wounds to testify to that, said Anand Ramanathan, an 
emergency relief worker with the Washington-based International Fund for Animal 
Welfare.  

Though some had respiratory problems and burns, most were injured by man, he 
said, some arriving with chopped-off paws, wide facial gashes or bullet-riddled 
bodies. Baktiantoro said babies are often kept as pets or sold abroad.  

"Many of these orphans will end up being traded internationally,'' he said from 
a wildlife center in Nyaru Menteng district, where some 400 orangutans, a 
quarter of them orphans, were being prepared for reintroduction into the 
jungle.  

But even though the apes are lucky simply to have survived another year, 
farmers say they have practiced slash-and-burn techniques for generations and 
will continue to do so next year. 


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