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Jun 11
2010
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Rescuers fight to save the life of a baby orangutanPosted by: International Animal Rescue Tagged in: Untagged
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A baby orangutan is in a critical condition after being rescued from an oil palm plantation by IAR's team in Borneo. Owing to the circumstances in which he was found, the poorly infant is clearly the baby of a female orangutan who died of her injuries after being savagely beaten. The lactating female had evidently been attacked while trying to protect her baby and rescuers had feared that he would never be found.

At the land clearing area they found a small camp with a few bulldozers parked next to the wooden building. When the Forestry Rangers who had joined the rescue team asked about the baby, the plantation workers claimed to have found him when he fell from a tree. An orangutan of about eight months old was lying in a small cardboard box. He was painfully thin, malnourished and feverish. He was also very weak, very frightened and barely moving.
Orangutans of this age would never wander alone in the forest. They remain clinging to their mothers and do not separate from them until they are much older. The small baby had been at the camp for more than two weeks which ties in with the findings of the autopsy of the female.

Campaign News
Advocates for Animals has this week submitted its response to the DEFRA Consultation on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses. We believe that a complete ban on wild animals in circuses is long overdue.
After over three years of hard work by Fauna & Flora International (FFI) and other organisations, the management plan for Brazil’s 184,000-hectare Cristalino State Park has finally been completed.
Summary:
More than 275,000 people and leading scientific and conservation organisations from the UK and around the world have called on the UK government to establish a protected area in the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT), which is comprised of the Chagos Islands and its surrounding waters.


