http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/wild-elephant-found-dead-in-aceh/


Wild Elephant Found Dead in Aceh 
By Nurdin Hasan on 12:20 pm May 10, 2013.
Category Environment, News
Tags: animal conservation, Indonesia endangered animals, Sumatran elephant 
 
Villagers watch the body of a dead elephant in Krueng Layoun Village, Aceh 
Jaya, Indonesia, 30 April 2012. An environmentalist from Flora Fauna 
International (FFI) believes that the elephant was poisoned by the owner of a 
palm oil plantation near the protected forest. The smallest of the Asian 
elephants, the Sumatran elephant is facing serious pressures arising from 
illegal logging and habitat loss from palm oil plantations. (EPA Photo/Hotli 
Simanjuntak)

Banda Aceh. A 10-year-old elephant was found dead in a jungle near Bangkeh 
village, Pidie district, Aceh, on Thursday.

Syarkawi, the head of Pidie’s Forestry and Plantation Agency, told the Jakarta 
Globe on Friday that the elephant’s body was discovered by the Mane 
Conservation Response Unit (CRU) Team while they were trying to shoo away 
dozens of wild elephants disrupting the local community living near the jungle.

CRU is a program set up by non-government organization Indonesian Flora and 
Fauna (FFI) to manage the conflict between elephants and the local people.

“When the CRU team took five tame elephants to direct the wild elephants back 
into the jungle, they did not want to move, the tame elephants were screaming 
and headed to the location where the dead elephant was found,” he said.

Syarkawi said he estimated the elephant died on Thursday morning. The body was 
discovered only 500 meters away from the nearest neighborhood.

When it was found, both tusks were still in place.

“We are still waiting for Aceh Natural Resources Conservation Agency [BKSDA] to 
finish the autopsy to find out the real cause of the death,” he said.

Rosa Rika Wahyuni, a veterinarian at Aceh’s BKSDA, said local residents believe 
the elephant was electrocuted because of the wires found entangled on its feet.

“Some locals said the elephant died after it bit an electronic wire, there were 
some wires scattered in the area,” she said.

BKSDA is still conducting an examination of the elephant’s organs to determine 
the real cause of death.

Estimates put the number of Sumatran elephants left in the wild at fewer than 
3,000, and the species is considered “critically endangered” by the 
International Union for Conservation of Nature. Conservationists say the 
remaining population is severely threatened due to habitat loss from illegal 
logging and palm oil plantations’ expansion.


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