Probe into gibbon attack at Malacca Zoo

on Thursday, December 15, 2011




PETALING JAYA, Malaysia - The Department of Wildlife and National Parks (Perhilitan) has launched an investigation into the attack by an aggressive male gibbon on a little boy at Malacca Zoo.
Natural Resources and Environment Minister Datuk Seri Douglas Uggah Embas said Perhilitan has been told to tighten safety measures to prevent a repeat of the incident.

"Perhilitan is investigating the gibbon attack. It has never happened before and we are keen to find out why it happened," he said yesterday.
The gibbon attack was the latest in a series of freak animal attacks that caused severe injury and in some cases, death to their victims.

The 15kg alpha male primate snatched three-year-old Muhammad Afiq Haziq from his father's arms in the attack on Tuesday and tore a chunk of flesh off his thigh. The boy also suffered facial and bodily injuries,
It had earlier bitten another visitor, five-year-old Zukrina Abdul Hadi, on her left ankle.
Muhammad Afiq is reported to be in a stable condition at the Malacca hospital after undergoing an operation on his ruptured tendon.

"I hope his wounds will recover fast," said his father Kamarul Baharin Othman, 38, at the hospital yesterday.
He denied reports that doctors were attempting to save Muhammad Afiq's leg from being amputated, saying it was not that serious.

Malacca Zoo director Ahmad Azhar Mohammed, who visited the injured boy at the hospital, said the 10-year-old gibbon had been quarantined pending a detailed investigation.
He said gibbons were not aggressive by nature, adding that the one which attacked the boy may have been provoked.

"We will re-inspect the condition of the gibbon's enclosure to ensure the safety of visitors," he said, adding that the zoo would also bear all costs incurred, including lodging for Muhammad Afiq's parents.
Malacca Zoo public relations officer Masri Mohd Arof said investigations were ongoing to discover how the primate had crossed over to the park from its colony on a man-made island.
The gibbon's enclosure is separated by a metre-deep waterway from the public viewing space to prevent it from escaping, as gibbons are afraid of water.

Earlier this month, Australian tourist Jenna O'Grady Donley was gored to death by a Borneo pygmy bull elephant at the Tabin Wildlife Reserve.
In September, a local tourist guide and his assistant were attacked by a 25-year-old orang utan at the Semenggoh Wildlife Centre in Sarawak. Both of them suffered injuries.

Resource:  The Star/Asia News Network

Malaysia seizes million-dollar ivory shipment: Customs

on Tuesday, December 13, 2011



KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysia has seized elephant tusks and ivory handicrafts worth an estimated four million ringgit (S$1.6 million) en route from Kenya to Cambodia, a customs official said Tuesday.
The haul is the latest to indicate Malaysia has become an Asian transit hub in the illicit ivory trade, and follows the seizure of hundreds of African elephants' tusks in several busts by Malaysian authorities in recent months.
Customs inspectors seized the container last Thursday in Klang, Malaysia's biggest port, after it was unloaded from a cargo ship.

"The cargo manifest said the container contained handicrafts (soapstone) and it was loaded in Mombasa port in Kenya," Azis Yacub, state customs director of the state of Selangor, where the port is located, said in a statement.

Officials also found carved elephant and rhinoceros ivory. Azis said the container's final destination was the port of Sihanoukville in Cambodia.
In August, Hong Kong authorities seized nearly two tonnes of elephant ivory worth about $1.7 million in a shipment from Malaysia, which wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC has described as a major hub for illicit wildlife products.

TRAFFIC says that the illegal ivory trade has been rising globally since 2004 largely due to increasing demand in China, where ivory is often ground up and used in traditional medicine.

International trade in elephant ivory was banned in 1990, but since then several auctions of tusks from elephants that died naturally or were seized from poachers have been permitted in Namibia, Botswana and South Africa.

Resource :  AFP

PANGOLIN MEAT WORTH RM3.9m SEIZED

on Friday, December 9, 2011



SANDAKAN: The newly-formed customs marine special team has seized frozen Pangolin meat worth about RM3.9 million.

The meat, weighing close to five tonnes (4,988 kilogrammes) was seized from a jongkong (long boat) after a brief pursuit in the Batu Sapi waters near Kampung Bahagia here on Wednesday.
“This is the biggest seizure of Pangolin meat by Sabah customs,” deputy state customs director Hamzah Sundang told a press conference here yesterday.

He said the success came on the second day of “Operasi Sempadan” involving the special team headed by senior customs officer Winston Julian and assisted by another senior officer Haji Saidin Jalaluddin.
The special team chased after the suspicious jongkong which was heading towards open sea at about 6.30pm on Wednesday.

After that, the long boat which was powered by two 200-horsepower engines then turned around and sped towards the shore.

The 40-feet long boat rammed into the shore after several men onboard jumped into the water to escape.
The special team managed to detain one suspect, an 18-year-old Filipino, and later found 178 cartons containing the meat of 1,068 Pangolins on the abandoned boat.

“Preliminary investigation revealed the jongkong was transporting the semi-processed Pangolin meat from Sandakan to the nearby Philippine island of Taganak,” Hamzah said.
He added that they are investigating to identify those responsible including where the Pangolin meat is from and its actual destination.

He said the Pangolin meat is worth RM 3,987,200 in the international market while the jongkong and the two outboard engines, RM 100,000. The case is being investigated under Section 135 (i) (e) of the Customs Act 1967.

Hamzah, meanwhile said they would continue to beef up operations against smuggling activities.
And, he also urged members of the public with information on such activities to inform the department.
“This is shocking,” Tourism, Culture and Environment Minister Datuk Masidi Manjun said when contacted by News Sabah Times yesterday.

“There is something wrong with enforcement. You cannot possible attempt to smuggle out so much Pangolin meat,” he said.

Resource :  New Sabah Times

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