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FLORA AND FAUNA
Ivory Coast deploys rangers to protect dwarf elephants
by Staff Writers
Abidjan (AFP) April 20, 2016


Rare tiger dies at Indonesia's 'death zoo'
Jakarta (AFP) April 20, 2016 - A critically endangered Sumatran tiger has died at a notorious Indonesian zoo where hundreds of animals have perished in recent years, an official said Wednesday.

The male tiger, named Rama, died of heart failure at the zoo in the city of Surabaya, on the main island of Java, spokeswoman Veronika Lanu told AFP.

It has been dubbed the "death zoo" as so many animals have died there prematurely because of neglect -- including several orangutans, a tiger and a giraffe.

Lanu defended the zoo after Rama's death, insisting proper procedures had been followed.

"The death was due to natural causes, we provided the best care we could," she said.

Rama, who was born in the zoo and lived there all his life, died on April 10.

The 16-year-old animal had serious problems with its teeth, had a bad cough and appeared lethargic in the weeks before his death.

Campaigners have criticised the zoo -- built a century ago during Dutch colonial rule -- for keeping animals in overcrowded cages and enclosures, which are often filthy and in a state of disrepair.

Following his death, it now has only three male Sumatran tigers and six females left.

The management of Surabaya zoo, Indonesia's largest, has been taken over by the city administration, but the deaths have not stopped and animal welfare groups continue to call for its closure.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature classifies the Sumatran tiger as an endangered species.

There are fewer than 400 remaining in the wild, all on Indonesia's main western island of Sumatra, according to environmental group WWF.

The creatures are under threat due to destruction of their rainforest habitat to make way for palm oil plantations and poaching.

Ivory Coast has deployed teams of rangers to protect the country's last surviving dwarf elephants from extinction, the head of the national park service told AFP Tuesday.

The elephants live in the Mount Peko national park in the country's west, a 34,000 hectare (131 square mile) area threatened by rampant deforestation driven by the country's booming cocoa industry.

Up to 70 percent of the park is occupied by cocoa farmers from neighbouring Burkina Faso, according to the head of the country's office for parks and reserves (OIPR) colonel Adama Tondossama, who accused them of destroying the area's flora and fauna to make way for their crops.

"These incursions for agricultural reasons have caused the forest canopy to almost disappear and have threatened endemic species like the dwarf elephant," said Tondossama.

The park, a rugged area with rich biodiversity is located alongside the Ivory Coast's cocoa producing region. The country is the world's largest cocoa exporter.

An armed group headed by Amade Oueremi occupied the Mount Peko forest for years and was arrested there in May 2013 by Ivorian authorities.

He is suspected of committing a range of crimes during the post-election violence that rocked the country in 2010-2011.

The OIPR has now begun a major operation to "liberate" the Mount Peko park, prohibiting any new clearings with dozens of forest rangers, trained in 2015, deployed to the region to enforce the ban.

"If the Mount Peko park disappears, agricultural production will fall in two years because the park creates a micro-climate that generates strong rainfall," said Tondossama.

The park is also significant for the Krahn people, a local tribe who use wood from the forest to make traditional masks.

Ivory Coast's west has seen sporadic fighting even since the end of the 2010-2011 conflict which claimed as many as 3,000 lives.


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