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This article is from The Star Online (http://thestar.com.my)

URL:

http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2003/10/7/features/6086697 & sec=f\

eatures

 

________________________

 

Tuesday October 7, 2003

A sunny future

By ED CROPLEY

 

Growing environmental consciousness offers a ray of hope for sun bears which

have been hunted for their body parts and caged as pets in the past, writes ED

CROPLEY.

 

SOK and Sao are not very happy bears. Pacing back and forth inside their tiny

steel cage, the only thing the two female sun bears have to look forward to each

day is another bowl of kitchen slops pushed in at the end of a long wooden pole.

 

 

 

Bought as cubs to draw guests to a sprawling open-air restaurant on the

outskirts of the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh, they have now grown too big and

dangerous to be let out of the cage, their home for the last nine years.

 

“We don & #8217;t let the bears go for walks any more because they are naughty,”

said a waiter, rolling up his trouser-leg to reveal a huge scar dating from the

last time Sok, now weighing in at 50kg of teeth, claws and muscle, tasted life

on the outside.

 

Despite the sorry plight of Sok and Sao, bears caged for the amusement of

guests and tourists in hotels and restaurants are becoming a less common sight

across Cambodia as it slowly emerges from decades of war, including the 1970s

Khmer Rouge genocide.

 

Alongside the United Nations-led economic and political reconstruction,

wildlife groups have been active since the late 1990s promoting the notion of

animal welfare & #8211; an alien concept to most of the impoverished

South-East-Asian nation & #8217;s 13 million people. Now, they say, those efforts

are bearing fruit as local attitudes to large and endangered animals such as the

sun bear slowly change.

 

Government-backed radio campaigns and huge billboards showing chained-up,

weeping bears having paws lopped off by meat cleavers have resulted in the

virtual disappearance of bear from Phnom Penh menus, says Suwanna Gauntlett of

animal charity WildAid.

 

The use of body parts such as the gall-bladder or penis in traditional

medicines is also on the wane, as is the habit of keeping caged animals as a

sign of personal power and prestige.

 

“It used to be that anybody who was anybody had to have a tiger in his living

room,” said Gauntlett. “But in many cases now we are successful in getting

people to hand over bears, even if they are rich and powerful.”

 

 

 

Also known as the honey bear for its reputed love of sweet food, the sun bear

is the smallest of all the bear family as well as being the least understood and

one of the most endangered.

 

Recognisable by a splash of cream-coloured fur under the throat, the

jungle-dwelling mammals are thought to live in an arc ranging from northern

Burma and Bangladesh to Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia and Malaysia.

 

But with their natural habitat under increasing pressure from logging and

man & #8217;s relentless expansion, the future of sun bears is looking bleak.

 

“Estimates range from 20,000 to 1,000 left in the wild,” says Ally Humphries of

Australian charity Free the Bears, which runs a sun bear rescue centre south of

Phnom Penh. “People know they are endangered, but not how critically endangered

they are.”

 

However, there are signs the message might be sinking in as thousands of

Cambodians, including school children, flock to see the rescued bears running

round a large, leafy enclosure rather than the iron cages more normally seen in

developing-nation zoos.

 

As another sign of changing times, Humphries cites the example of Bibi, a

year-old sun bear bought by a local in a market near the border with

neighbouring Vietnam solely so she could be spared the cooking pot or a life of

caged misery.

 

Unfortunately for the sun bears, however, Cambodia is not like other countries

in the region in that it has become more receptive to Western influences as a

result of the international reconstruction work and the presence of so many aid

agencies.

 

The price of a sun bear cub may have dropped from US$650 (RM2,470) in 1998 to

around US$350 (RM1,330) now as the local market dries up, but prices show few

signs of falling further because of continued demand from Vietnam and China,

conservationists say.

 

“The problem now is trade,” said Suon Phalla from Traffic, the WWF-backed

wildlife trade monitoring group. “People are hunting the bears now for selling,

not for meat.”

 

Sun bears, often stuffed into sacks on the back of motorbikes, are occasionally

rescued on their way to Vietnam but conservationists say there is little they

can do to halt a lucrative trade in what remains one of Asia & #8217;s poorest

countries.

 

Few of Cambodia & #8217;s 1,000-odd & #8216;forest officers & #8217; have proper

training or receive more than US$30 (RM114) per month in pay, leaving the sun

bear & #8217;s future in what could be a regional refuge very much in the balance.

& #8211; Reuters<p>

 

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