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Orangutan and Her Baby Luckily Survived a Forest Fire, Only to be Stoned by Villagers

Human activities cause massive forest fires. Yet, humans attack the apes when they seek food and run to the villages for safety.

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West Kalimantan, Indonesia—an endangered Borneo orangutan and its son, Gito fled from their natural habitat due to a massive forest fire, only to be hurled with rocks and captured by the local villagers on October 14, reports say.

The fires currently affect Sungai Putri and Pematang Gadung. These are two protected areas with the largest orangutan populations in Ketapang.

In the photos, members of the International Animal Rescue (IAR) administered immediate treatment to the traumatized and malnourished pair. The IAR arrived just in time to rescue them from the angry villagers who were about to tie them up.

Photo credit: International Animal Rescue

“It’s not uncommon for local people to react badly when they encounter wild orangutans,” Lis Key from IAR told said. “They have never seen an orangutan before, and many of them are frightened – or they regard them as pests.

“In some cases villagers only throw stones to frighten the orangutans away, but others do try to capture wild orangutans. Mostly people will kill the adults and even eat them while they will either keep the baby or sell it as a pet.”

Photo credit: International Animal Rescue

The IAR team immediately anesthetized the adult and administered intravenous fluids while the frightened baby clings to her all throughout. The team also removed the rope tied around the mother’s waist. The adult orangutan sustained minor skin injuries. Despite her thin frame, she still produced milk for Gito.

Karmele Llano Sanchez, the program director for IAR Indonesia said, “It was very fortunate our rescue team got there in time, otherwise the orangutans would have been killed.”

Illegal forest and agricultural fires lit to clear land for plantations have spread to protected areas—national parks and conservation areas included. The fires and the region-wide pollution intensify due to the arid season.

“Many people believe the current fires are the worst since then. They are linked to the El Niño weather phenomenon and extended periods of drought during the dry season,” the IAR stated.

The blaze forced the apes to retreat and head to villages to find food. It’s not just their homes that are in peril, but their lives as well.

“We have put a great deal of effort into preserving orangutan habitats and believed the orangutans in protected areas would be safe, but now we find they are still in danger,” Sanchez said in a press release.

“Orangutans and other animals are being burnt alive, left without food and starving to death, or being pushed out of their habitat into plantations and villages where they are at risk of being killed.”

The IAR team performed a veterinary examination on Gito and his mother. Aside from the mother being extremely thin, both were quite in good health.

Photo credit: International Animal Rescue

“The mother was quite skinny because she had not been eating for at least a month since the fires started,” Sanchez said.

Photo credit: International Animal Rescue

As the adult orangutan began to emerge from sedation, the IAR vets transported the pair to the conservation area of PT KAL, an area they believed the orangutans will have an abundant supply of food.

Photo credit: International Animal Rescue

Photo credit: International Animal Rescue

Photo credit: International Animal Rescue

When they released the mother, she climbed a tree and began to scour in the branches. Gito was still clinging to her side.

Photo credit: International Animal Rescue

The oil palm company’s conservation team monitors the pair, and they say that both are adapting well to their new home.

“We are thrilled with Gito’s progress so far,” the chief executive of IAR, Alan Knight OBE said.

“Of course, he has a very long way to go in his recovery—and a long journey ahead if he is to be rehabilitated and eventually return to the wild—but he is in safe hands now.

“Tragically, Gito won’t be the last baby we rescue.

Photo credit: International Animal Rescue

“Our rescue team are risking their lives every day to save orangutans, and there will be more babies orphaned.

“I would just urge the public to continue supporting our work so we can save as many orangutans as possible.”

For the past two months, the UK-based group ran more than a dozen operations to rescue orangutans, which have wandered off their natural habitats.

H/T: Buzzfeed, Daily Mail

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