Forestry Industry, Government and NGOs Unite in the Fight Against Indonesian Wildlife Crime

Released on = February 22, 2006, 8:49 pm

Press Release Author = Sumatran Tiger Conservation Program

Industry = Environment

Press Release Summary = An intensive training course on wildlife protection
highlights the commitment and concern of Government, NGOs and the forestry industry
regarding the critical need for protecting Indonesia\'s endangered tigers, orangutans
and rainforest habitat.

Press Release Body = SUMATRA,INDONESIA: This week in Sumatra nationwide efforts to
eradicate poaching and illegal trade of tiger, rhino, elephant, orang-utan, made
progress with the initiation of an intensive "boot-camp" training course focused
exclusively on enhancing wildlife protection. Designed to increase the role of local
villagers and communities, the course is unique in that trainees are supported by,
not only Government and non-governmental conservation organisations, but also by
private industry.

Organised by the Sumatran Tiger Conservation Program (STCP) and hosted by the
Department of Forestry (Bukit Tigapuluh National Park), the course brings together a
diverse group of twenty-nine dedicated individuals from across Indonesia, united by
a common mission to conserve some of the world's most endangered wildlife.

International and Indonesian conservation groups sending trainees include
Conservation International, World Wildlife Fund, Sumatran Orang-utan Conservation
Program, and the Sungei Wain Protected Forest Management Unit (Kalimantan).
Department of Forestry Ranger Police in attendance have travelled from West Sumatra,
North Sumatra, Aceh, Jambi, Riau (Sumatra) and Central Kalimantan provinces.

In addition to Indonesian and foreign instructors from Bukit Tigapuluh National Park
and the STCP, training staff have been assembled from provincial Police, the local
health department, the Indonesian Rhino Conservation Program and the Sumatran
Orangutan Conservation Program (Frankfurt Zoological Society).

The training board also includes 8 members of Indonesia's new and elite Forest
Police Rapid Reaction Force (SPORC: Satuan Polisi Hutan Reaksi Cepat) - only
recently formalised by the Minister of Forestry in January 2006.

Class-based training, starting on the 2nd February, runs for 15 days. This is
followed by 10 days of practical field exercises. A final 5 day "live" exercise
places 8 widely dispersed protection units deep in the mountains of Bukit Tigapuluh
with the task of, through radio coordination between teams, designing and executing
the strategic interception and safe arrest of an "evading" 9th team.

The wildlife protection system being promoted is one which relies on recruitment and
intensive training of personnel from local communities surrounding the protected
area, each unit lead by an armed ranger from the Department of Forestry. The
participation of villagers in this has, in practice, seen a significant increase in
the local acceptability of park and wildlife law enforcement efforts. It has also
increased the perception of community ownership of nearby forests, developed a
stronger sense of stewardship, and greatly facilitated the delivering of
conservation messages to the heart of surrounding villages. In return both rangers
and park management enjoy the support and empowerment generated by these close
community links.

The wildlife protection "boot-camp" this year represents the second such training in
Bukit Tigapuluh. In late 2004 the first camp recruited, trained and deployed 5
anti-poaching and habitat protection teams across the park. These Tiger and
Orangutan Protection Units (TOPU) have been operational since then, providing a
front-line defence against wildlife poaching and illegal logging. Together with the
national park, the TOPUs have had unprecedented success in arresting and prosecuting
a major wildlife poaching and trade syndicate stretching across several provinces.
They have also been effective in eradicating large-scale illegal logging from the
park's buffer zone and provided ongoing monitoring of conditions in the remotest
parts of the 1,400 square kilometre park.

With STCP and local Government support the units have also set-up a community school
in the most isolated settlement of the park's indigenous forest-dwelling
tribes-people (Talang Mamak). Literacy rates of local children have been raised from
0 to 60% over 2 years. A large number of adults also attend evening classes. A
result is that the TOPUs receive the strong support of this remote tribe, including
full access to their wealth of knowledge about the surrounding forest and its
wildlife.

A goal of this year's training is to break-down barriers and develop closer
cooperation between NGOs working throughout Indonesia, and the building of bridges
between Government, non-government and industrial partners with a concern for
wildlife conservation.

The STCP's field coordinator in Bukit Tigapuluh, Muhamed Yunus, summarises the
benefits of the course: "The depth and intensity of training is unparalled.
Navigation alone accounts for more than 30 hours of class time. More importantly,
the skills developed are immediately applied in the field through a series of
simulated week-long operations - all conducted under extreme conditions - identical
to those in which wildlife protection teams do their valuable work".

A unique and welcome addition to the group this year is the attendance of staff from
Riau Andalan Pulp & Paper (APRIL - Asia Pacific Resources International Ltd) - a
major forestry plantation company that operates close to several high biodiversity
sites within Riau province. Developing strong links between Government, NGOs and the
major land-owning industries is considered by many as the key to ensuring
responsible future management of Indonesia's natural heritage.

"It's now hoped that other multinational companies in Riau will follow the excellent
lead shown by APRIL in acknowledging responsibility for protection of wildlife in
and around their concessions" reports STCP's director, Dr. Neil Franklin.

-- More information at
http://wild-tiger.blogspot.com

(#END OF TEXT)
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NOTES FOR EDITORS:

-- The Sumatran tiger, recognised as critically endangered by the IUCN and as an
Appendix I CITES species, is now limited to less than 500 wild animals.

-- The Sumatran Tiger Conservation Program is a collaborative effort of the
Indonesian Department of Forestry, The Tiger Foundation (Canada) and the Sumatran
Tiger Trust (UK). It has been working to ensure a future for Sumatran tigers and
their rainforest habitat since 1996.

-- Keywords: sumatran tiger, indonesia, sumatra, sumatran tiger conservation
programme, wildlife crime, training, bukit tigapuluh, riau, rapp, april, protection,
tpu, protection unit, forest, rainforest, enforcement, law, traffic, collaboration,
environment, conservation, wildlife

(#END)


Web Site = http://wild-tiger.blogspot.com

Contact Details = Neil Franklin, PhD
Sumatran Tiger Conservation Program
Jl. Juanda 100, Bogor, Indonesia
Tel/fax: +62-21-8650114
http://wild-tiger.blogspot.com

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