04 July 2009

Environmental laws fail to protect endangered fauna in East Timor

ETLJB 4 July 2009 SYDNEY - These images of the carcasses of several protected cuscus apparently for sale at a market place in the eastern town of Los Palos in East Timor were published on the blogspot Timor Agricola on 14 February 2009.

Under Indonesian law, the species Phalangeridae (Cuscus) and all species of the genus are protected against capture, possession and trade by Surat Keputusan Menteri Pertanian No 247/Kpts/Um/4/1979 (Decision of the Minister for Agriculture).

As the greater substance of East Timorese law is the Indonesian law as applied by UNTAET Regulation No 1 of 1999 on the authority of the transitional administration in East Timor and by the Constitution and subsequent legislation enacted by the legislative organs of the Timorese state, that Indonesian Ministerial Regulation is in force in East Timor and the killing and trade in cuscus in East Timor is a violation of the law.

In addition to the applicable Indonesian law, one of the earliest legislative interventions by the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor was Regulation of 30 June 2000 No 19 of 2000 on Protected Places. It includes the following provisions:

Section 3
Endangered Species

3.1
For the purposes of the present regulation, "endangered species" shall mean a species of animal or plant at risk of extinction within East Timor. The following species of animal shall constitute endangered species within East Timor:

(a) Sea tortoises;
(b) Sea turtles;
(c) Marine mammals, including bottlenose dolphins, whales and dugongs;
(d) Wallabies;
(e) Crocodiles;
(f) All animal and plant species listed in Appendix I or Appendix II of the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species*; and
(g) Any other plant or animal species designated as endangered by the Transitional Administrator.

3.2 Endangered species and the habitats of endangered species shall be protected throughout the terrestrial and marine territory of East Timor. Under the present regulation:

(a) the killing, injuring, harming, taking or disturbing of any endangered species;
(b) the destruction in any way of the habitat of an endangered species;
(c) the selling of an endangered species or the selling of any product made from an endangered species; and
(d) the export of an endangered species or any product made from an endangered species,
shall be prohibited.

3.3 A person or legal entity wishing to conduct scientific research by taking samples from an endangered species or its habitat shall apply to the Transitional Administrator for an exemption from the operation of section 3.2.

3.4 The form of an application for an exemption shall be prescribed by directive.

3.5 The granting of an exemption may be subject to conditions. No exemption shall be granted in respect of research that imperils the survival of an endangered species in East Timor.

Marsupials such as the cuscus are protected wherever they exist for good reason - because of their unique genetics and their rarity. The capture, killing and trade in the protected cuscus in East Timor is a matter that the government, committed to environmental protection in East Timor, should be formulating a policy about and instructing the law enforcement agencies to implement the law to end the trade in this and other endangered species in East Timor.

* Cuscuses are listed in the Appendices to the Convention
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This is an edited machine generated translation of the Portuguese text of the post on Timor Agricola:

The meda is a marsupial that lives in the trees of the forests of Timor. It can also be found on neighboring islands of Indonesia from Timor, the Moluccas to New Guinea. It was apparently introduced in Timor by humans 6,500 years ago, from New Guinea. The meda animal belongs to the same order of the koala, the diprotodontia.

The scientific name of the meda is an allusion to the fact that two phalanges in each foot together by a fold of skin that the animal uses to groom.

We can find this animal in the primary forests of Lore or Jaco, in secondary forests throughout the island and even in gardens and orchards.

In Muslim areas of Indonesia, religion prohibits the hunting of meda. In other regions, it is an important part of diet of the people since prehistoric times, providing animal protein to a diet that is usually lacking in these nutrients.

The meda are domesticated quite easily. In Dili, they are frequently seen on the streets carried on a long stick that a man hangs from his shoulder, and where the meda is desperately clinging.

These animals can weigh up to 4.5 kg, but usually it weighs around 2 kg. It has a long tail from 28 to 42 cm, which it uses to clingi to the trees and is devoid of hair on end. The tails of males are completely white. The fur is thick and similar to wool. In adult males the color varies from white and dark gray. The females have brown hair brown or gray and both sexes have a black stripe on the dorsal neck and tail. The young are maroon. The marsupial pouch of the female has four nipples. The feet are particularly characteristic, because the fingers are opposable as in humans.

The following is an extract from Fataluku medicinal ethnobotany and the East Timorese military resistance :

The small intestines of the cuscus (Phalanger sp.), a small nocturnal marsupial, were also used to treat malaria. While collecting medicinal plants, the two FALANTIL guides constantly scanned dead standing trees for signs of the cuscus' nest. When a nest was spotted, one of the men climbed the large dead standing trees unaided and removed the cuscus by the tail. The primary reason for hunting the cuscus was for the meat, however, the small intestines can be boiled or roasted and eaten to treat malaria. It was believed that the small intestine has curative properties because the cuscus feeds heavily on Derris sp. and Tinospora smilacina. T. smilacina is used traditionally in Australia to treat infections and inflammatory conditions and was found to have significant anti-inflammatory activity by Li et al. Furthermore, Derris spp. are traditionally used as fish poisons throughout South East Asia and have highly active compounds known as rotenones.

The Common Cuscus Description: Classis: Mammalia Subclassis: Theria Infraclassis: Marsupialia Ordo: Diprotodontia Subordo: Phalangeriformes Superfamilia: Phalangeroidea Familia: Phalangeridae Subfamilia: Phalangerinae Genus: Phalanger
Species: Phalanger orientalis



1 comment:

Anonymous said...

This is the fact that we are lack of law application, control and protection of the endangerred species. I think this issue happened very long time ago, and it noticed that many policy makers have been known it, because it commonly sold in Los Palos market. The question is, if the law or regulation has been existed, why this issue freely continued happens? Relevant departments must be awake to protect it. Keep reading the regulation and directives and implementing them because you are being paid for it.