New deal to rescue Borneo orangutans in Malaysia
Officers of Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Program (SOCP) try to grab Jhon, an 11-year-old orangutan, who clings to his cage to be released into the wild at a quarantine station in Sibolangit, North Sumatra, Indonesia, Thursday, Oct. 9, 2008. Orangutan populations in Indonesia's Borneo and Sumatra island are facing severe threats from habitat loss, illegal logging, fires and poaching.
(AP Photo)New deal to rescue Borneo orangutans in Malaysia
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia – Conservationists said Tuesday they were planning a big push to protect Borneo's orangutans, pygmy elephants and other endangered wildlife by purchasing land from palm oil producers to create a forest sanctuary.
The deal is meant to help stave off the demise of orangutans, whose numbers have dwindled amid illegal logging and the rapid spread of palm oil plantations in Malaysia and Indonesia, the only two countries where orangutans are found in the wild.
The Malaysian-based LEAP Conservancy group is in talks to buy 222 acres of tropical jungle land in Malaysia's Sabah state on Borneo island from palm oil operators, said Cynthia Ong, LEAP's executive director.
The territory is needed to link two sections of a wildlife reserve that is home to an estimated 600 orangutans, 150 Borneo pygmy elephants and a vast array of other animals including proboscis monkeys, hornbills and river otters.
The funds are being raised through public and private donations, Ong said. The British-based World Land Trust, which is working with LEAP on the initiative, said on its Web site that 343,000 pounds ($533,000) was needed to acquire the land.
This was the first time that nongovernment activists were trying to acquire land in Malaysian Borneo for environmental protection with the help of government officials, Ong said.
It was not immediately clear when the purchase might be finalized, but Ong said the land has not been cleared for plantations so far because of a lack of access roads.
"There is a desperate need for this purchase," Ong told The Associated Press. "We have no other avenue to avoid a potential conflict between humans and wildlife."
Environmental groups estimate the number of orangutans in Malaysia and Indonesia has fallen by half in the past 20 years to less than 60,000, largely due to human encroachment on forests. Researchers say more than 5,000 of the primates have been lost every year since 2004.
Borneo is also home to some 1,000 pygmy elephants, which are genetically distinct from other subspecies of Asian pachyderms because they have babyish faces, large ears and longer tails. They are also more rotund and less aggressive.
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An orangutan sits inside its cage at the Pingtung Rescue Center for endangered Wild Animals in Pingtung, southern Taiwan October 17, 2008. Captive male orangutans hoist barrels to appear bigger than men. Gibbons scream and macaques snatch the glasses off people's faces. But the humans in charge say these animals just want their two-legged, invitation-only visitors to know the shocking stories of how they ended up at the southern Taiwan facility: a rescue centre for smuggled animals doubling as an educational zoo. Most animals were originally smuggled to Taiwan from Southeast Asia, and a few were taken illegally from forests on the island. Picture taken October 17, 2008.
REUTERS/Ralph Jennings (TAIWAN)Mariam, a 16-month-old Sumatran orangutan who was confiscated from an illegal owner a year ago plays around in a tree as her keeper Ayub Damianto watches at an orangutan rehabilitation center in Sibolangit, North Sumatra, Indonesia in Wednesday, Oct.15, 2008. Orangutans in the wild are on the brink of extinction after poaching, the pet trade and habitat loss cut the populations.
(AP Photo/Binsar Bakkara)Baby orangutans Mariam, Ayu and Jarot, cling on their keeper Ayub Damianto at an orangutan rehabilitation center in Sibolangit, North Sumatra, Indonesia in Wednesday, Oct.15, 2008. Orangutans in the wild are on the brink of extinction after poaching, the pet trade and habitat loss cut the populations.
(AP Photo/Binsar Bakkara)Officers of Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Program (SOCP) carry tranquilized Jhon, an 11-year-old orangutan, to be released into the wild at a quarantine station in Sibolangit, North Sumatra, Indonesia, Thursday, Oct. 9, 2008. Orangutan populations in Indonesia's Borneo and Sumatera island are facing severe threats from habitat loss, illegal logging, fires and poaching.
(AP Photo)An official from an orang-utan conservation programme carries an orangutan from a rehabilitation centre near Medan, North Sumatra October 9, 2008. About seven orang-utans will be returned to their habitat after a year in the rehabilitation centre, an official said.
REUTERS/Stringer (INDONESIA)Orangutan mother Siti looks at her baby Isalie in their enclosure at the Munich zoo October 7, 2008. Isalie was born on July 14, 2008 in the zoo.
REUTERS/Michael Dalder (GERMANY)Orangutan baby Isalie sits on its mothers arm in their enclosure at the Munich zoo October 7, 2008. Isalie was born on July 14, 2008 in the zoo.
REUTERS/Michael Dalder (GERMANY)




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