She is too weak and frightened to leave the trunk where she had sought sanctuary as machines tear down her jungle home in Borneo.
A starving, heavily pregnant orang-utan clings to a solitary tree high above what had been pristine rainforest for millennia – till giant bulldozers moved in and flattened it in days.
Boon-Mee was too weak and frightened to leave the trunk where she had sought sanctuary as the machines tore down her jungle home in Borneo, reports the Sunday People.
That meant she could not forage for food – condemning herself and her unborn baby to an agonising death.
Boon-Mee seemed doomed to share the fate of so many orang-utans in Indonesia, where palm-oil plantations are destroying the primates’ tropical habitats on Borneo and Sumatra.
Hundreds of apes are slaughtered every year with guns and machetes in the drive for profits.
But in fact Boon-Mee was lucky because in her case the plantation owners belong to a conservation group and told UK-based charity International Animal Rescue about her.
An IAR team – backed by local forestry officials – was despatched and spent hours scrambling over fallen trees, often having to wear masks because stumps had been torched and were still smouldering.
When they finally arrived at the scene, they found not just Boon-Mee but three other orang-utans.
Charanya had a baby and was desperately searching for food.
Kalaya was semi-conscious and lactating, leading the team to think she’d just had a baby which had either died or had been taken as a pet.
Meanwhile, Boon-Mee was surviving on bark.
IAR official Lis Key said: “It’s heartbreaking to see the appalling state of these animals as their habitat is razed for the palm oil industry – they were weak from hunger. It’s a small comfort that this time rather than chase them off or kill them, the company did the right thing and contacted us.”
Boon-Mee was the trickiest of the primates to catch because she was too weak to climb down from the tree.
In the end, rescuers shot her with a tranquilliser and caught her in a net.
The three adults and one infant were taken to a refuge, where Boon-Mee successfully had her baby.
All the apes were nursed back to health and later released into the wild deep in another part of the forest. Lis said: “Despite the condition they were in, they really are the lucky ones.
“The worst thing is there are hundreds of orang-utans who won’t be so lucky because of the awful conditions they are forced to try to survive in.”
Experts fear there are only 40,000 orang-utans left in the wild – a shocking 20,000 fewer than a decade ago.
And IAR warn deforestation for palm oil is the No1 cause.
The oil is used in up to half of all processed foods, is increasingly used as bio-fuel and is a key ingredient in items like shampoo and cosmetics.
Lis said: “There are plenty of alternatives to it but none is as cheap”.
And shoppers often don’t realise how widely it’s used because it can legally be tagged “vegetable oil” on product labels.
But the EU plan to introduce new labelling rules next year.
For more about International Animal Rescue’s orang-utan project, visit www.internationalanimalrescue.org
SELECT COMMENTS
4:49 AM on 25/5/2013
Heartbreaking
Susan Taylor
11:56 PM on 22/5/2013
I will be looking for palm oil in products now and will not buy.
Davy Slenderass
5:04 PM on 22/5/2013
Can I advise all those reading this who are concerned about it, please check the label of EVERY thing you buy and see if it has palm oil, or even vegetable oil in it. Don’t buy it, and contact the company whose product it is and tell them why you’re not buying it. Have a look in you kitchen and bathroom now. It’s probably in half of the things in your cupboard. As long as consumers blindly consume and forget all about articles like this by the time they next visit the shops, the rainforest will continue to get destroyed. I live in Indonesia and have been to the Sumatran rainforest where Orang-utans also live, and have seen one of these beautiful, peaceful creatures a few metres away from me. The scale of deforestation there is staggering. You can drive for a whole day or more and see nothing but palm trees in an area that should be dense jungle. Rhinoceros, tigers, elephants are also under threat. All so we can have an ingredient in our shampoo or our peanut butter, an ingredient that we survived without for thousands of years and we don’t need. The only reason this ingredient is in our products is profit. It’s disgusting. So take action, and tell these companies this isn’t a price worth paying
Clare Adams
2:21 PM on 21/5/2013
Breaks my heart to see this, as a world what are we doing to it.
Clair Trebes
10:53 AM on 21/5/2013
Horrific ….. we wouldn’t subject a human who’s given birth to this, so who’s right is it to subject another living being to the same! 🙁 Greed is the worst thing in this world it controls EVERYTHING
Marlene Ogle
7:52 AM on 21/5/2013
My hearts breaks for these animals, such a cruel world we live in
Robyn Morris
12:46 AM on 21/5/2013
NZ dairy farmers (and by extension Fonterra), and probably Australian dairy farmers too, are culpable in this – a lot of dairy farmers feed their herds Palm Nut Kernel as a supplementary feed. This is what’s left after the oil is extracted. They maintain that what is imported to NZ is “ethically produced” but as far as I understand it one of the environmental groups here has found that a large part of what is being imported is not in fact certified as ethical, and not even traceable. Shameful for our dairy farmers.
Will Nicholls
5:41 PM on 20/5/2013
Heartbreaking. The UN needs to come up with a feasible solution to rapid deforestation, otherwise these articles will very soon become all too common. It’s an inconvenient truth.
Carlow Wexford
8:57 AM on 20/5/2013
As long as money and profit is the centre of our values, this and worse will go on. Until we have an egalitarian world, your tears are for nothing.