Markets
Up • Traveling  over Land • Traveling by sea • National Parks • Site Map
 

 

Up • Markets • Illegal Trade • Rehabilitation • Medical use • as Pets • as Food • Endangered • News

Animal Markets ( Pasar Burung )

Jakarta's Pramuka Market

Indonesia's Animal Market Is Biggest Asian Hub For Trade In Endangered Species

by Lely T. Djuhari, Associated Press
April 6th, 2002
JAKARTA, Indonesia - Peering out from a filthy cage filled with animal droppings and rotting bits of food, the siamang gibbon stretches out a long black hairy arm to grab a banana offered by one of the four men who keep this endangered primate imprisoned while they search for a buyer.
These animal traders are part of an illegal multimillion dollar business in Indonesia, which has more endangered primates than any other country. Animal rights activists say Jakarta's Pramuka Market - a five minute walk from where the siamang gibbon is held in a ramshackle house stacked with cages - is Asia's largest black market for rare animals.
"You want baby orangutans?" said a market vendor who identified himself only as Iwan. "How about a siamang gibbon? Better be quick, I've sold five already today. If there is anything you want, we can get it for you," Iwan added.
The total value of Indonesia's illegal animal trade is unknown, but animal activists say hundreds of creatures are sold each month despite their protection under the Convention on International Trade on Endangered Species, known as CITES.
Demand for rare animals is great; they are sold as pets or valuable collectors' items and for use as food or medicine. Typical is the siamang, the largest of the gibbon apes, with long arms for swinging in trees. The cute siamang babies are popular as pets, but owners often abandon the full grown animal, which can be a meter tall (three feet) and has a loud piercing cry.
Environmentalists say a shrinking habitat also threatens Indonesia's rare species. The lush forests are rapidly disappearing due to urban expansion and uncontrolled logging. Corruption and political instability further compromise animal safety.
Often the wild animals wind up at the Pramuka Market, which covers an area the size of a football field in East Jakarta. Established in 1967 as a bird market, it has sold all manner of creatures since the 1980s. Overlooking it is a remnant of failed campaigns to combat the illegal trade - a faded billboard threatening sellers and buyers of endangered animals with five years imprisonment.
Market officials insist that only legal animals are sold, but shady transactions regularly take place in the markets's back alleys.
"The illegal trade of endangered animals is rampant here," said Will Smith, an activist with the Liechtenstein-based Gibbon Foundation, which focuses its efforts on Indonesia.
Animal activists face a big challenge in Indonesia. Protecting endangered animals is not a major concern of officials, and illegal items made from animals are openly marketed.
Department stores display jewelry and knickknacks fashioned from giant turtles and elephants' tusks, and hawkers approach drivers at busy downtown intersections, offering terrified animals like the cuscus, a small marsupial, for as little as 250,000 rupiahs (dlrs 25).
Newspapers and online media sites publish classified ads under "collector's items" offering rare animals or just parts of them.
A stuffed Sumatran tiger has one of the largest pricetags at around dlrs 2,500. Even pieces of this magnificent creature are for sale - tiger's penises are sold as aphrodisiacs, and ground up bones, claws and teeth go into traditional Chinese remedies for arthritis and rheumatism.
The World Wide Fund for Nature Indonesia is planning a major campaign starting next month to raise awareness of endangered animals, focusing on the plight of the tigers along with as orangutans and rhinoceroses.
The fund says an average of 33 Sumatran tigers are killed every year and the species could become extinct by 2010. The Javan Rhino, once abundant in Southeast Asia, is now on the critically endangered list. Hunters slaughter it merely for its horn, a valued ingredient in Asian medicine.
Fewer than 20,000 orangutans are left in Indonesia because hundreds of the orange-haired apes are smuggled each year to the United States and other industrialized countries, fetching up to dlrs 30,000. Baby orangutans are the most popular - and most vulnerable. Smugglers usually ship five babies together, sedated in a cardboard box, to ensure that at least one survives the long, arduous journey by boat.
Chairul Saleh, a senior campaigner for the nature fund, said the new campaign of information about rare species must go beyond the usual cooperation with authorities to catch smugglers.
"We want to cut off the trade from the consumer side," he said. "We want to make endangered animals deeply unfashionable."

Jakarta Barito Market

The JAAN team surveyed the market at Jalan Barito in South
Jakarta recently and found that slow lorises, monkeys, owls,
hedgehogs, snakes, turtles and tortoises, fruit bats and many many
species of exotic birds were openly for sale there. Some of these
animals are critically endangered and are on the protected species list.
This means that it is illegal for them to be kept, traded or sold. The
Forestry Department was alerted to the presence of protected species
at the Barito market. JAAN hopes that the Forestry Department will
confiscate those animals and prosecute the traders.

You can help by contacting the Forestry Department when you see
protected species being kept or sold. Greater public reaction is
needed to help end the wildlife trade in Indonesia!

Indonesian Forestry Department
web : http://www.dephut.go.id/
email : indofor@dephut.go.id , ms.kaban@dephut.go.id

Illegal trade in Indonesian markets putting wild animals in danger

Source: AFP, 17 July 2008

JAKARTA — Tiger skins and rare caged primates openly sold at markets in the heart of Indonesia's capital are the most brazen and visible aspect of a thriving illegal wildlife trade.

Indonesia is struggling to take on a multi-million-dollar industry that is stripping the archipelago nation's vast forests of endangered species for enormous profit by selling them to buyers around the world.

With corruption rife and authorities overwhelmed, conservationists say police and forestry officials have barely made a dent.

Activists and the government estimate Indonesia loses at least 80 million dollars a year through the illegal trade, with rare animals -- dead and alive -- being sold at huge mark-ups once they get to overseas markets.

"What's interesting is that an orangutan caught in Kalimantan (on Borneo island) costs no more than three million rupiah (327 dollars) and is sold in Jakarta for five million rupiah," said Asep Purnama from the non-government organisation ProFauna.

"Once they get to Taiwan they will sell for around 100 million rupiah and in Europe they'll sell for 400 million," he said, adding that an estimated 100 orangutans are taken every year from Kalimantan's forests alone.

Purnama's group estimates around 10,000 animals found only on Sumatra island were poached in 2007 to supply the illegal trade.

While some animals are shipped directly from Kalimantan or Sumatra to Malaysia or the Philippines, much of the trade is directed through the teeming animal markets of Indonesia's major cities, Purnama said.

"Since the illegal wildlife trade in the markets is the result of wild poaching, stopping the illegal trade in the markets would reduce the poaching itself," he said.

A short walk through Jakarta's Jatinegara shows a flourishing trade.

Peddlers sell slow lorises, a rare bug-eyed primate from Sumatra's forests, for less than 10 dollars each as pets for middle-class families.

Most buyers likely don't know trade in the seemingly cute animals is illegal -- or that they usually die within weeks from the stress of captivity -- but the sellers do, and they are extremely camera shy.

A few hundred metres (yards) away in Jatinegara's gem market, however, one trader selling tiger skins was happy to show off her wares.

The skins are from tigers killed more than a decade ago, she said, and the most valuable parts, the bones and meat, were long ago sold to China and Singapore.

What was left would only be good for making handbags, she said.

Most of Jakarta's animal trade, including at Jatinegara, comes through the city's massive Pramuka bird market, the largest in Southeast Asia, according to Femke den Haas from the Jakarta Animal Aid Network (JAAN).

Occasional raids have driven most of the high-profile endangered animals from clear view, but buyers from around the world still place orders for goods as exotic as tiger cubs and ivory, den Haas said.

"The bigger stuff you get from houses from behind (the markets) and the even bigger stuff, for example orangutans, you have to order," she said.

Investigations by JAAN and other non-government organisations have found exotic birds brought by ferry from Papua in the country's east and rare animals brought in from Sumatra by air-conditioned coach.

"We call them the grandmother mafia network because all these grandmothers transport the animals," den Haas said.

While conservationists have been pushing for a crackdown, they say authorities are often either under-resourced, corrupt or unaware of the problem.

"(For a prosecution) you need to pay the judges, you need to pay the police, you need to pay for the food in the police cell," den Haas said.

"The reason the justice system takes so long is that the judge says: 'I didn't know these species were protected, I have two sea turtles in my house'," she said, adding this was a genuine anecdote from a recent trial.
Despite the slow progress, the forestry ministry says it is doing the best it can with limited resources.

"Regular enforcement is still going on. I see the enforcement making a lot of progress compared to the past," said ministry biodiversity conservation head Toni Suhartono.

But the ministry can usually only muster small teams to go on raids, and they are often easily outwitted in the winding alleyways of the animal markets, Suhartono said.

"They're very smart," he said of the wildlife dealers.

"When we send people there they disappear. It's like hit and run," he said, adding that low penalties meted out by courts mean even successful raids are not a strong deterrent.

Corruption within the ministry also made enforcement a challenge, Suhartono said, with officials earning a basic wage of only 1.3 million rupiah a month.

ProFauna said a recent investigation found one forestry ministry officer in Medan in northern Sumatra moonlighting as a smuggler.

Another investigation by the group in 2007 found ministry officials had sold off confiscated ivory that had been stockpiled as evidence in a poaching trial.

Endangered animals sold at market in Indonesia

By Elizabeth Weise, USA TODAY
JAKARTA, Indonesia — A walk through one of Jakarta's bird markets is like a living gallery of endangered species.

Four-month-old Asian freshwater terrapins, on the endangered list, go for $21.

White cockatoos, the export of which is banned by Indonesian law, are $87.

The nocturnal and protected slow loris, curled up at the bottom of its cage, sells for $21.

Perhaps most haunting are the primates. Tiny, unprotected macaques reach their arms through cages for handouts.

Truly endangered species, including gibbons, siamangs and orangutans, aren't usually displayed but are available for sale. Orangutans — thought to number only 4,000 on the island of Sumatra today — are especially prized as pets by high-ranking officials who flout the law, says Jatna Supriatna, executive director of Conservation International in Indonesia.

Orangutans are kept only until they're 5 years old, at which point they become too strong to keep and are either killed or handed over to groups that attempt to rehabilitate them.

It takes three days to "order" a new one, says Diah Sulistiowati in Conservation International's Medan office.

"That's so they have time to go to the jungle and shoot a mother with a baby. The mother falls out of the tree, they grab the baby, and three days later they sell it to you."

Three to five die for every baby that reaches the market.

Each of these animals is endangered because of either habitat loss or illegal trade, an enormous problem across much of southeast Asia and especially in Indonesia.

Groups such as Conservation International, ProFauna, the Leuser International Foundation and the Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Program are working to save habitats, end the trade in such animals and preserve them for future generations.

Indonesia is working hard to protect its natural resources, says Amanda Katili Niode, special assistant to the minister of environment in Jakarta. The department runs a program to rehabilitate confiscated animals.

But conservation groups say corruption, illegal logging and the planting of unsustainable palm oil plantations take a toll.

"Animal trapping often peaks in the fall, when poor families must find the money to pay school fees for their children," says Sulistiowati.

 

  

 mailto: info@indonesiatraveling.com