Guest guest Posted July 28, 2004 Report Share Posted July 28, 2004 Please read this press release carefully and send a protest letter, fax, or e-mail to the Thai Embassy in the capital city of your country requesting that the animals confiscated from the Wildlife Rescue Fund of Thailand be returned to the facility. Request also that the 100+ orangutans smuggled into Thailand in recent years be confiscated and returned to Indonesia and that all involved in the smuggling of the orangutans into Thailand be prosecuted and imprisoned. In the US the contact is (can other list members post addresses in their countries?) His Excellency H.E. Kasit Piromya Royal Thai Embassy 1024 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W., Suite 401 Washington, D.C. 20007 Tel : (202) 944-3600 Fax : (202) 944-3611 E-mail : thai.wsn ---------------------- For immediate release PRESS RELEASE 27th July 2004 RESCUED WILD ANIMALS ACT AS POLITICAL PAWNS FOR THAI FORESTRY AUTHORITIES? The Thai Forestry Department appeared to be using wild animals as political pawns when it raided the Wildlife Friends of Thailand rescue center in Petchaburi on the eve of a major political meeting with high ranking Indonesian officials. The centre, which offers refuge to over 130 animals, was stormed on the afternoon of the 27th July by over 20 Thai officials who confiscated fourteen animals. This occurred less than 24 hours before Edwin Wiek, the centre's founder, is due to attend a meeting between visiting Indonesian officials and the Thai Forestry Director-General regarding the repatriation of over 100 orangutans that are currently being illegally held in Thailand at various places. Wiek has been actively lobbying for the confiscation, repatriation, and release back to the wild of the orangutans for over eight months and the issue has caused increasingly large amounts of domestic press interest and international attention. It seems that the price the authorities are asking for this unwanted attention is the happiness and comfort of rescued wild animals. The centre has a history of working closely with the Forestry Department, having previously returned animals to the authorities when appropriate enclosures or breeding programmes became available. The violent and aggressive approach taken today by the Forestry Department staff, which saw a number of animals injured as they were captured and saw family groups torn apart, threatens the working relationship which has been built over the last three years since the centre was first established on temple grounds at Kao Look Chang. American, European and Australian animal lovers, who help as volunteers at the centre, looked on in horror as animals were baited and physically wrestled to the ground with steel cable nooses, before being stuck in tiny cages and loaded onto the back of a truck to be taken to a holding bay. Cages were stacked precariously on top of each other allowing monkeys to fight through the bars, resulting in several injuries. Baby macaques, only a few months old, were situated right next to a large sun bear who was severely stressed and throwing himself from side to side; the babies were obviously terrified. Several of the volunteers sat in front of the trucks refusing to allow the animals to leave the premises before being physically removed by the local police. Cathy Case, a professional wildlife rehabilitator from California USA said: " In 25 years of wildlife rehabilitation I have never seen such callous disregard for the welfare of animals " Edwin Wiek has refused to be intimidated by the authorities' show of power and commented: " I have lived and worked in Thailand for over 15 years and whilst I am not surprised by these tactics I am disgusted that an international government would use animals to communicate political messages. It only makes me more determined to not only get these animals back for further treatment, but to repatriate the orangutans currently held in Thailand and to go on fighting to ensure animals have a safe and healthy refuge in Thailand in the future. " Monkey World, the well respected international primate rescue centre and Dr Willie Smits, Indonesia's leading orangutan expert, have both condemned the authorities' actions. Media contact: Amy Corrigan, Tel: + 66 (0) 11924683 E-mail: info Note to editors: Edwin Wiek, leading wildlife rescuer in Thailand, whose work was featured on National Geographic Channel, CNN, Discovery and local Thai Television. is available for comment or interview on <edwin.wiek or +(66)9-5461398 American and British volunteers are available for interview / comment Dr. Shirley McGreal, Chairwoman International Primate Protection League POB 766 Summerville SC 29484, USA Ph. 843-871-2280: Fax: 843-871-7988: www.ippl.org " Humans think they are smarter than dolphins because we build cars and buildings and start wars etc...and all that dolphins do is swim in the water, eat fish and play around. Dolphins believe that they are smarter for exactly the same reasons. " --Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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