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Indonesian orangutan 'beheaders' claim self-defence: police
by Staff Writers
Jakarta (AFP) Feb 1, 2018

Russian, Chinese smugglers arrested with tonne of bear paws: NGO
Moscow (AFP) Jan 30, 2018 - A group of Russian and Chinese smugglers have been arrested near the border between the two countries in possession of a tonne of bear paws as well as tiger, deer and frog parts, an animal protection group said Tuesday.

The smugglers were arrested at the weekend by Russian customs officers in the far east of the country with 870 of the bear paws "and the remains of at least four Siberian tigers" in their three vehicles, said the Russian tiger protection NGO.

The Russian and Chinese nationals were also caught with bear teeth, deer tails and penises and other animal parts as well as arms and ammunition and an amount of amber, the Amur Tiger Center said.

According to the tiger protection group, the smugglers were headed for China when they were apprehended, and were preparing to cross the frozen Lake Khanka on the border.

China is a big market for animals parts from endangered or protected species including tigers, bears, elephants, rhino and pangolins.

The parts are used in the traditional medicine market which flourishes despite the total lack of scientific evidence as to their efficacy and Chinese government campaigns to end the trade.

"The animal body parts are often transported close to Chinese New Year," which this year falls on February 16, the NGO's head Sergey Aramilev said.

The Siberian tiger, also known as the Amur tiger, is the largest of the big cats. There remain only around 350 of the animals in the wild, in China, Russia and North Korea.

Two Indonesian men arrested for shooting an orangutan multiple times and then decapitating it before tossing the corpse into a river, have told investigators they acted in self-defence, police said Thursday.

The suspects, both rubber plantation workers on the island of Borneo, admitted they killed the critically endangered male Bornean orangutan whose headless body was found last month.

Its hair was burned off its body which was riddled with at least 17 bullet wounds.

Pictures of the beheaded corpse floating by the riverbank quickly spread online and sparked an angry reaction from animal rights activists, among others.

"They claimed they killed the orangutan because they were scared to see such a big animal suddenly coming their way," Central Borneo police chief Anang Revandoko told AFP.

"The investigation is still ongoing," he added.

Orangutans can grow to the size of humans and have enormously powerful arms but are not known to attack unless their habitat is threatened.

Investigators said they seized a machete allegedly used to attack the animal, whose body was discovered by a local villager.

"The men shot the animal multiple times but (they said) it didn't die," Revandoko said.

"One of them then decapitated it from behind. Then they buried its head in the backyard of their house and dumped the body in the river."

If convicted, the suspects, who are 32 and 41, could face up to five-years in jail under Indonesia's conservation law, he added.

Bornean and Sumatran orangutans are listed as critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

The Sumatran orangutan population is estimated to be just under 15,000, while about 54,000 orangutans are thought to live in Borneo, according to the IUCN.

Rampant logging and the rapid expansion of palm oil plantations have been blamed for destroying their jungle habitat.

Plantation workers and villagers are sometimes known to attack an animal that many see as a pest, while poachers also capture them to sell as pets.

Indonesia traffickers sold crocs, pythons on social media: police
Jakarta (AFP) Jan 31, 2018 - A group of suspected animal traffickers have been arrested in Indonesia for selling crocodiles, pythons and other protected species through Facebook and the messaging service WhatsApp, police said Wednesday.

The case is the latest example of how social media has become a key online market place for animal traffickers as conservationists warn that tech giants have not done enough to halt the trade on their platforms.

The seven suspects, who were arrested at separate locations in and around Jakarta last week, bought the animals for just 300,000 rupiah ($22) each before re-selling them online for between two million and five million rupiah, authorities said.

"The suspects put the animals up for sale on a Facebook page or via WhatsApp," said Jakarta police spokesman Argo Yuwono.

"Interested buyers were asked to meet and the animals were handed over to them," he added.

The suspects have been charged under Indonesia's environment law which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

The for-sale animals, including some rare species endemic to Indonesia, were brought to the capital Jakarta from the jungles of Java and Sumatra islands, Yuwono said.

During their raids, police said they confiscated two crocodiles, two reticulated pythons, six jungle cats, a pair of gibbons, two Javan lutungs, a Javan surili, two owls, a brahminy kite eagle, and a slow loris.

The animals were handed over to Jakarta's conservation agency.

Earlier this month conservation watchdog TRAFFIC warned that Facebook had emerged as the top site for wildlife trafficking in the Philippines with thousands of endangered crocodiles, snakes and turtles illegally traded in just three months.

Indonesia is one of the world's most biodiverse countries making it a lucrative market for the illegal trade in wildlife, which has brought some endangered species to the brink of extinction, activists say.

In November, Indonesian police arrested several smugglers who stuffed more than 120 exotic birds into drain pipes.

TRAFFIC has also warned that the illicit sale of pangolins has seen thousands of the critically endangered animals smuggled out of Indonesia every year.


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New research suggests chemical weaponry is essential to the territorial conquests of Argentine ants, a species that inhabits six continents and dozens of oceanic islands. Previous studies have detailed the species' other competitive advantages, like having more than one queen per colony. The species is also extremely adaptable and has disposition for transience. The ants don't build permanent homes like so many other species. Perhaps most important, however, is the species' extreme aggre ... read more

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