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2 smuggled Sumatran orangutans flown home from Thailand

BANGKOK — Two critically endangered orangutans smuggled into Thailand three years ago were returned to Indonesia on Thursday (Dec 17), where they will undergo rehabilitation before being released into the wild.

An orangutan, which was seized from the Thailand-Malaysia border three years ago, looks from a cage before it is being transferred to Indonesia, at the airport in Bangkok.

An orangutan, which was seized from the Thailand-Malaysia border three years ago, looks from a cage before it is being transferred to Indonesia, at the airport in Bangkok.

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BANGKOK — Two critically endangered orangutans smuggled into Thailand three years ago were returned to Indonesia on Thursday (Dec 17), where they will undergo rehabilitation before being released into the wild.

Ung Aing and Natalee, both four-year-old Sumatran orangutans, were taken from a wildlife rescue centre in Ratchaburi province to Bangkok's airport, before being put on a flight to Indonesia where they will initially stay at a rehabilitation centre in Jambi Province on Sumatra island.

Before being put on the flight, the pair were fed with bananas and green apples, and cleared of having Covid-19 after taking a test, said Suraphong Chaweepak, a director at the Thai division to protect wild fauna and flora.

"This is the fifth repatriation of orangutans back to Indonesia since 2006," Prakit Vongsrivattanakul, an official at Thailand's Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation said at the airport.

A total of 71 orangutans have now been repatriated to Indonesia from Thailand.

The two great apes were seized on the Thai-Malaysian border in 2017 and after the smugglers were prosecuted, Thailand agreed to send them back to Indonesia, according to a joint statement from Thailand's wildlife and conservation ministry and Indonesia's embassy in Bangkok.

Orangutans are poached illegally from forests for food, to obtain infants for the domestic and international pet trade, or for traditional medicine.

There are only estimated to be around 100,000 Bornean orangutans left in the wild, according to the World Wildlife Fund, while only about 7,500 Sumatran orangutans are thought to remain.

In addition to illegal poaching, populations have crashed because of habitat destruction due to large-scale logging and replacement of forests with cash crops such as palm oil. REUTERS

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orangutan Thailand Indonesia animal smuggling

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