BY NURDIN HASAN (THE JAKARTA GLOBE)
Banda Aceh, TAG – A wild male Sumatran elephant aged about
30 found dead in Aceh Jaya district over the weekend is the third wild elephant
death in Indonesia’s Aceh province in three months.
Amon Zamora, head of the Aceh Natural Resources
Conservation Agency, said on Sunday that the carcass was found by Ranto Sabon
village locals on Saturday morning. He believed a person deliberately killed it
using a steel booby trap set using a tree.
“It’s very likely that someone killed [the elephant],
because the ivory [tusks] had already been removed by the time it was located.
We have asked for help from the police to investigate and try to find out who
did this,” he said.
“We are trying hard to capture the individual or
individuals who may have killed this elephant for whatever reason, because that
is an action that is forbidden by Indonesian law.”
Armidi, the chief law-enforcement official in the
Forestry and Plantation Office of Aceh Jaya district, said the heavy trap had
been installed on a fallen tree and angled so that the sharp steel spikes would
enter the animal’s head.
“By the time the police arrived at the place where the
elephant was found, the trap had already been removed by the [perpetrator],”
Armidi said.
He added that details regarding the type of implement
used to kill the animal had been supplied by people living in the area as well
as surmised from marks left on the tree.
Ranto Sabon residents identified the animal as one
that had regularly been eating crops planted in the area. They spoke of various
unsuccessful attempts to drive it off, including using fireworks.
Armidi said the most recent skirmish with the elephant
had been on Friday but that “almost every day that elephant would enter farms”
in the area.
According to Ranto Sabon village chief Amiruddin, the
presence of the elephant made residents anxious. “People have suffered losses
[because of the elephant] and that’s why they put up traps in various
locations,” he said.
He said that in view of people’s substantial losses,
he could not stop them, adding that reports to the Conservation Response Unit
requesting that the animal be dealt with had not received a response.
CRU is a program of Fauna and Flora International
Indonesia that attempts to manage human-elephant conflicts by moving tame
elephants into conflict areas.
Amon said humans and elephants were in an ongoing
struggle for space in 19 of 23 Aceh districts, with Aceh Jaya, North Aceh,
South Aceh, East Aceh, Aceh Singkil, and Pidie among the most conflict-prone
areas.
“The conflict is caused by roads used [as corridors]
through which the elephants pass while foraging. We have warned the residents
several times against [creating obstructions], but they’re still continuing to
do it.”
Amon said “the population growth for elephants in Aceh
is actually pretty good because in a group of elephants there would always be
one baby.”
But he noted that elephants were frequently being
killed by farmers seeking to protect their crops, as well as by poachers
seeking ivory.
In May, a 10-year-old male elephant was found dead
near Bangkeh village in Pidie district.
Two months later a 2-year-old elephant died after
living for two months as a “pet” for a household in Blang Pante village in
North Aceh. The elephant was reportedly left behind by its mother and captured.
Humans have also clashed with tigers
over land further south in Sumatra.[]
Wild Elephant Found Dead in Aceh
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
July 15, 2013
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