JAKARTA (AFP) – An Indonesian court has handed lengthy prison terms to poachers who killed dozens of rare Javan rhinos, court rulings seen by AFP yesterday showed, drawing praise from conservationists who said it would help deter lucrative wildlife crime.
The rhinoceros endemic to Indonesia’s most populous island is critically endangered, with authorities believing there are only around 82 remaining in Ujung Kulon National Park in western Java – their last stronghold.
In 2023 authorities uncovered a criminal gang that confessed to killing 26 rhinos over the span of five years in the 120,000-hectare park. A court in Indonesia’s Banten province this week sentenced the mastermind of the gang to 12 years in prison and gave five of his co-conspirators 11 years, according to rulings posted on its website.
All were also fined IDR100 million (USD6,135) each, which would be replaced by three additional months in prison if not paid, said the rulings issued on Wednesday.
“It sets a strong precedent and delivers a clear warning to those who would threaten Indonesia’s wildlife,” Executive Director of the International Rhino Foundation Nina Fascione said in a statement yesterday.
“Adequate justice in a case like this is critical to ensuring rhinos are safe from future poaching.”
Irfan Suryana, a representative of an environmental collective based in villages around the national park, welcomed the punishments but said more needed to be done to prevent poaching.
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