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Hanoi (AFP) Jul 24, 2006 The endangered apes from the rainforests of Indonesian Borneo were confiscated less than two weeks ago from a private hotel zoo near the southern Vietnamese business hub of Ho Chi Minh City. The two females, Don-Don aged two-and-a-half and three-and-a-half year old Dong, returned in the cargo hold of a Garuda Airlines flight that was due to arrive in Jakarta with an hour's delay at 6:55 pm (1155 GMT). "It's a very good message to illegal wildlife traders and rich people who think they can afford to keep them," Edwin Wiek of the not-for-profit Borneo Orangutan Survival (BOS) foundation said before leaving with the apes. Nguyen Vu Khoi, executive director of the group Wildlife At Risk, said "everything went smoothly and they're on the plane." The two non-governmental groups found the animals and alerted Vietnamese authorities, leading Forestry Protection Department officials to confiscate the great apes from the Tanh Canh Hotel on July 11. They had been smuggled into the country seven to 12 months ago from the Indonesian province of Kalimantan on Borneo island, Wiek said. "We believe the animals came by boat through the Mekong Delta somewhere on a trade ship, although one of them may have been brought through a small harbour in Cambodia and then taken overland," said Wiek. "I think people actually order the animals and get them shipped out. I believe it's organised," he said. The animals were bought for a total of 15,000 dollars, he said. Wiek said the apes were dehydrated and malnourished when they were found, but were in good health after being cared for by veterinarian Cheryl MacPherson, who also flew with the animals. The hotel zoo where the apes were found also kept macaques, civets, birds and about 80 Asiatic black bears, used to extract bile used for traditional medicine, said Wiek. Orangutans are protected under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, which Vietnam signed in 1994, yet experts say the trade in them continues unabated. "Thailand and Cambodia are probably number one, and Vietnam would definitely be somewhere in the top 10 as well," said Wiek. He praised Vietnam for clearing the repatriation in less than two weeks. "It's the first time ever I have witnessed something like this," he said. "Vietnam is doing absolutely the right thing and is sending out a very clear message." By contrast, Wiek said, the repatriation of 53 orangutans from a zoo in the Thai capital had been held up for almost three years, and Cambodia had refused to discuss the matter of orangutan smuggling. An estimated 65,000 orangutans remain in the wild in Indonesia and Malaysia, says the foundation, but the animals are threatened by habitat loss, disease and the illegal pet trade. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Related Links Dirt, rocks and all the stuff we stand on firmly
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