Hunters leave a trail of blood
Document Type:
Media
Citation:
Aglionby, J. and Jha, A. (2004, September 30). Hunters leave a trail of blood. The Guardian. [Online]. Available: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2004/sep/30/endangeredspecies.environment [2008, February 21].
Year Published:
2004
Sec Title:
From exotic pets to furs and obscure medical ingredients, the illegal animal trade is flourishing. To investigate, John Aglionby meets a dealer in Sumatra, while Alok Jha reports on the work of the Cites team at Heathrow and inspects an astonishing store of contraband
Type Work:
Newspaper Article
Availability:
Online
Language:
English
Country:
Sumatra and England
Url:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2004/sep/30/endangeredspecies.environment
Bushmeat Asian Type:
Wildlife Trade
Keywords:
trade; poaching; Sumatra; England; pet; medicinal; dealers; enforcement; airport; customs; CITES; smuggle
Abstract:
Irwan Subrata's business card is appropriately vague for a man who spends only a tiny proportion of his working day in legitimate activities to provide cover for his myriad criminal dealings. Alongside pictures of a lizard, beetle and cobra, it states his name, mobile phone number, half his address in a medium-sized town in southern Sumatra and the ambiguous title Purchaser of Various Animals.
"If anyone comes asking I can prove that I'm a genuine trader," Subrata says, pulling out of a cupboard a flimsy file of dodgy-looking receipts, invoices and orders for an assortment of reptiles. "I act as the agent for this company in Jakarta. I send them live reptiles to order."
What the talkative, poorly educated dealer would not show a curious inspector or police officer are the contents of the cheap plastic bag stored next to the file. This would expose him for what he really is, a small-time criminal dealer in threatened species who cares little for the law and less for the fate...












