Russian orangutan smuggler caught in Bali
March 24, 2019Bali's conservation agency said a 27-year-old Russian man, who was departing Denpasar airport on a flight to Russia, was stopped when staff using an X-ray machine spotted the 2-year-old male ape inside his suitcase.
Police also found two live geckos and five lizards, alongside baby formula, blankets, and the orangutan asleep inside a rattan basket.
"We believe the orangutan was fed allergy pills which caused him to sleep. We found the pills inside the suitcase," agency official Ketut Catur Marbawa said. Police were checking to see if international smuggling syndicates were involved, he added.
Read more: New orangutan species found in Indonesian forest
The accused, identified by authorities as Andrei Zhestkov, appeared well-prepared, said Marbawa.
"[It] was like he was transporting a baby."
Local authorities quoted the Russian as saying he had been gifted the young orangutan by a friend, another since-departed Russian tourist, who purchased the animal for $3,000 (€3,600) at a street market on Indonesia's main island of Java.
Marbawa said the accused, if convicted, could face up to five years in prison and $7,000 in fines for attempting to smuggle the animals.
Critically endangered species
Only about 100,000 orangutans, a critically endangered species, remain worldwide, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (ICAN).
Robbed of their forest habitat on Indonesia's islands, including Borneo and Sumatra, due to palm oil and paper production, some orangutans end up being shot or poached for sale as pets.
Last year, four Indonesian men were arrested over the killing of an orangutan on Borneo, which they were accused of shooting some 130 times with an air gun.
Only around 13,400 Sumatran orangutans remain in the wild.
ipj/jlw (AFP, AP, dpa)