Guest guest Posted May 23, 2004 Report Share Posted May 23, 2004 Dear Friends of the Orangutan, Dr Willie Smits, orangutan and rainforest advocate, will be touring the UK next week to give lectures, attend fundraising events and liaise with conservation departments of a number of zoos. BOS UK director Michelle Desilets will present Dr Smits with a cheque for £10,000, raised by supporters of BOS UK. The money covers the expenses of acquiring a river island sanctuary for 25 juvenile orangutans, and the development of a special enclosure for larger wild orangutans awaiting translocation to less threatened areas. Chester Zoo will also present Dr Smits with donated supplies, including a digital camera attachable to a diagnostic microscope. Dr Smits and Miss Desilets will be travelling to Howlett's and Port Lympne Zoo (30/05), Monkey World in Dorset (31/05, London (29/05,31/05, 02/06 and 03/06), Cambridge University (02/06), Oxford University (02/06?), Birmingham University(01/06?), Chester Zoo (01/06), Nottingham University with FUn Day Fundraising event (03/06)and possibly a number of other zoos. The entire tour lasts from 29 May to 3 June. Members of the press are invited to attend any of the events or arrange for an interview with Dr Smits. Please contact Michelle Desilets at bos_uk or at 07719425110 to arrange. Members of the public are also invited to any event. Please RSVP to the same contact stated above. Most events will be preceded or followed by a wine and snacks reception. There is no cost to any event, but donations are very gratefully received. Below is a brief biography of Dr Smits: Dr. Willie Smits has been instrumental in the conservation of primates and their natural habitat for nearly two decades. A Tropical Forest Ecologist, Dr. Smits has conducted leading research on forest ecosystems, and has trained over 1,000 researchers and local inhabitants on forest management and related nature conservation critical to the long-term survival of Indonesian forests. Dr. Smits founded the Wanariset forestry research station on the island of Borneo in 1985 to develop leading-edge reforestation techniques, many of which were passed into Indonesian law. In 1991, Dr. Smits founded the Wanariset Orangutan Reintroduction Center, which along with the Wanariset’s Nyaru Menteng Center in Central Kalimantan, currently hold several hundred orangutans confiscated from the illegal pet trade. Dr. Smits also founded the Balikpapan Orangutan Society (BOS) in Borneo, in 1991 (now called the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation) to raise funds and to help educate local people on issues vital to the survival of orangutans and forest ecosystems. BOS UK, one of over a dozen sister organizations, is based in the England to support funding and educational programs. The efforts of Dr. Smits and his team have resulted in the successful reintroduction and translocation of more than 400 orangutans to their natural habitat during the past 10 years. Dr. Smits has served as Senior Advisor to the Indonesian government's Ministry of Forestry on forest rehabilitation and orangutan affairs, and he is the director of the Gibbon Foundation, an organization dedicated to animal conservation in Indonesia. He is an active consultant for the Indonesian Orangutan Survival Program, and is a member of various scientific committees for forest management. As team leader of the International Ministry of Forestry, Tropenbos, Kalimantan Project, Dr. Smits also supervises the work of several Ph.D. students in an ongoing tropical forest research project. Dr. Smits has received several awards for his dedicated conservation work. In 1998, he was the first non-Indonesian to receive the prestigious Satya Lencana Pembangunan award from the president of Indonesia. Dr. Smits was knighted in the Netherlands and has received various other international awards for his conservation work. Dr. Smits and his important work have been featured in many documentary films, including CNN Earth Matters “Flames of Extinction”, BBC’s “Orangutan Rescue”, Storyteller Production’s “Just Hanging On”, and the new Alchemy Films production “The Disenchanted Forest” for National Geographic Television. Dr. Smits has a M.Sc. in tropical forestry, genetics and tropical soil science, and a Ph.D. in tropical forestry with a focus on symbiotic associations with fungi. Dr. Smits’ wife, Syennie, is from North Sulawesi, and they have three sons. Messenger - Communicate instantly... " Ping " your friends today! Download Messenger Now Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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