ID :
222274
Mon, 01/09/2012 - 09:06
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Shortlink :
https://www.oananews.org//node/222274
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Sanctuary For Rescued Pygmy Elephants To Begin This Year
KOTA KINABALU (Malaysia), Jan 9 (Bernama) -- A sanctuary for the
rehabilitation of rescued Borneo pygmy elephants is expected to be operational
in the middle of this year.
Sabah Wildlife Director Dr Laurentius Ambu said 2,000 hectares of land has
been reserved for the sanctuary, known as the Borneo Elephant Wildlife
Sanctuary, in Kinabatangan.
Kinabatangan is a district located in Sandakan Division, in the east of Sabah, Malaysia on the island of Borneo.
"We do not intend to house all the (rescued) elephants there. We will keep
the animals there for treatment and then we will release them back into the
wild," he told reporters after the opening of the Sabah Wildlife Conservation
Colloquium 2012 here Monday.
The colloquium was opened by Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister
Bernard Dompok.
Ambu said 20 elephants initially would be housed for treatment and
rehabilitation once the sanctuary is operational.
He said there are 60 to 100 elephants of the pygmy species to be located and
rescued using satellite tracking.
Pygmy elephants, a smaller kind of the elephant species, are considered
endangered, with about 2,000 left in Sabah.
The sanctuary, to be operated by the Sabah Wildlife Department and the
Malaysian Palm Oil Council, will consist of a rescue facility and a research and
education division.
Dompok has urged the Malaysian oil palm industry to collaborate with the
state government in implementing the Species Action Plan, particularly for the
conservation and rehabilitation of Sabah's three iconic species -- the orang
utan, the Borneo pygmy elephant and the Sumatran rhinoceros.
"I am optimistic that, with the cooperation of all the parties, the oil palm
industry can co-exist in a sustainable manner with the environment, particularly
in Sabah," he said.
-- BERNAMA