Jakarta Globe – AFP, January 10, 2014
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| Pig-nosed turtles are seen during a press conference at the Soekarno-Hatta airport quarantine station in Jakarta on April 1, 2013. (EPA Photo) |
Indonesian
officials said Friday they have rescued more than 8,000 baby pig-nosed turtles
hidden in suitcases and thought to be destined for China and Singapore.
A total of
2,968 were discovered in four suitcases at the airport serving the capital
Jakarta after arriving from the remote eastern Papua region, said Zaenal Abidi,
quarantine official.
“The
suitcases were full of plastic boxes holding 15 to 20 turtles each. Sadly, 14
of them were dead on arrival,” he said.
Airport
officials were asked Thursday to be on the look-out for pig-nosed turtles —
classified as vulnerable — after 5,400 of the creatures were discovered in
seven suitcases in Papua, he said.
Abidi said
that pig-nosed turtles smuggled through Jakarta are usually sent to Singapore
or China, where they are sold as exotic pets and sometimes end up in food
markets.
All the
turtles would be returned to their natural habitat in Papua, Abidi said.
He added
that police knew who had checked in the luggage but their whereabouts were now
unknown.
The
pig-nosed turtle is only found in Australia and New Guinea, an island shared
between Papua New Guinea and Indonesia, and is protected under Indonesian
conservation laws.
It has a
distinctive snout-like nose and webbed feet.
The
International Union for Conservation of Nature lists the pig-nosed turtle as
vulnerable and trade of the species is restricted.
Agence
France-Presse

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