BY NURDIN HASAN (THE JAKARTA GLOBE)
Banda Aceh, TAG – Search and rescue crews
began the long trek into the depths of the Gunung Leuser National Park on
Saturday to rescue five men who spent the last three days trapped in a tree
after Sumatran tigers killed and ate a sixth member of their party, police
said.
A 30-member team entered the 7,927 square-kilometer
national park on Saturday after villagers’ attempts to rescue the men were
thwarted by the site of four Sumatran tigers near the base of the tree, Aceh
Tamiang Police chief Adj. Sr. Comr. Dicky Sondani said on Sunday.
“It might need two or three days to walk on foot to
the depths of Leuser jungle,” Dicky said. “If the tigers are still under the
tree, we will have to shoot and anesthetize them so that we can rescue the five
[men].”
The men, all residents of Simpang Kiri village in Aceh
Tamiang district, entered the dense national forest in search of the agarwood —
known locally as gaharu — a rare and extremely expensive type of heartwood used
in the production of aromatic oils and incense.
Resin-infused agarwood is the result of a mold that
infects the alim tree (aquilaria malaccensis), an endangered tropical evergreen
found in the jungles of Southeast Asia.
A kilogram of agarwood can fetch some Rp 5 million
($505), Dicky said, but the jungles of the Gunung Leuser National Park house
dangerous tigers and elephants. The police recently had to rescue another group
of men trapped in the park, he said.
“It’s worse this time because there are tigers waiting
for the villagers,” Dicky said.
“People keep entering the jungle to look for alim wood
because it’s very expensive; up to Rp 5 million ($505) per kilogram. But, well,
that’s the risk; there are many tigers and elephants in Gunung Leuser’s jungle.”
The men were attacked by tigers on Thursday after they
caught and killed a tiger cub in a snare meant to catch a deer, police said.
Nearby tigers drawn to the scene of the injured cub and pounced on the men,
killing and eating 28-year-old David as the five others climbed a tree to
safety.
The residents of Simpang Kiri village entered the
national park after the men called for help on their cell phones. But as the
villagers neared the tree, the site of four large tigers and David’s partially
eaten remains kept the rescue party at bay.
They have remained in the tree for three days.
Tiger attacks have become increasingly common in
Sumatra, where palm oil and pulp plantations have destroyed much of the
rainforest, shrinking animal habitats and putting the endangered tigers in
contact with local residents.
More than a hundred Sumatran tigers are believed to
roam the grounds of the Gunung Leuser National Park.[]
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Tigers Kill One, Trap Five Others in Leuser National Park
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on
July 07, 2013
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