NST Online
Saturday, July 19, 2008, 10.39 AM
World News
   
Announcement
 
More...
More...
More...
 
 
 

2008/05/17
The education way to tiger protection
By : Sharifah Mahsinah Abdullah
Email to friend Email to Friend         Print article Print Article


TUMPAT: There are fewer than 500 Malayan tigers left in the jungles of the peninsula. And the biggest threat of extinction comes from man.

The number of tigers are dwindling as habitats are lost to human development and poachers hunt for trophies, exotic dishes and traditional medicine.

More than 100 people living in the border areas were briefed on these and other facts during two seminars organised by the Malaysian Conservation Alliance for Tigers (Mycat) and the Wildlife Department.

The seminars, attended mostly by Thai nationals, were held in a local temple at Kampung Kuala Jambu on Thursday night, followed by Kampung Mentua yesterday.

During the 90-minute programme, facilitator Rosli Hamat showed slides of protected animals and led a discussion on poaching, smuggling and other wildlife crimes.
Mycat co-ordinator Loretta Ann Soosayraj said Kelantan was the second state to organise the programme since it was introduced.

The first was in Johor last year.

The rural outreach programme is aimed at creating awareness on the effects of poaching and smuggling protected animals.

It is also designed to encourage people to report to the authorities if protected animals are being hunted in their area.

"We chose Kampung Kuala Jambu and Kampung Mentua as they are located near the border.

"The authorities have discovered that animals are being smuggled into Thailand through Kelantan, before being shipped to China," she said after the programme at Kampung Kuala Jambu.

Soosayraj also said the response to the Tiger SMS Hotline launched last December was overwhelming.

The 24-hour hotline number is 019-3564194.

Kampung Kuala Jambu village headman Eh Sin Eh Sik said the programme taught the villagers which animals to hunt.

"It's an important issue. Some of us are confused about whether or not it is legal to hunt certain animals.

"We don't know which ones are protected and which are not."

 



School Sponsorship Programme
Picture OTHER STORIES


Picture MOST READ TODAY!

Dewan Rakyat



TEXT ADS
Make Money Online For Newbies
START EARNING 5-FIGURE INCOME WEEKLY
ORIFERA : Miraculous Olive Leaf Extract
CIA Death Squads In Afghanistan
USE INTERNET, GET MONEY WEEKLY!!!
3000 MB Webhosting RM80/Year Only !
Advertise With Us Here!

WEEKEND READ
Paradise in the city

MOST residents of Bukit Damansara today would not imagine that some 100 years ago their precious plots of land were homes to elephants and even the grandiose wild Seladang.
Your Health: Supplement your genes

YOUR genes are you. Your destiny is coded in them. So is your health and longevity. Can you change the genetic code and hence change your life? It is the nature versus nurture debate that has been going on all our lives.
Your Health: When the old man's disease strikes

Most irritating. Annoying, to say the least, for it comes in dribs and drabs. This is the lot of men suffering from enlarged prostate, writes ANNIE FREEDA CRUEZ.
MY INTEREST
Beauty BEAUTY
Beauty Fragrance of the Orient
Tech TECH
Tech Rock-a-bye turtle
Music/Games MUSIC/GAMES
Music/Games Play: Game imitating life
Movies/Theatre MOVIES/THEATRE
Movies/Theatre See: Baby, a surprise for you
CBT MOTORING
Motoring Polo BlueMotion for fuel economy
Fashion FASHION
Fashion Fabrics for every occasion
Health HEALTH
Health Walk ahead of danger
Deco DECO
Deco As time goes by...
Travel Times TRAVEL
Travel Tour of the living museum
Food FOOD
Goodbites Timeless Italian flavours

corporate info About NST | Contact Us | Advertising | Subscribe Online | Privacy Policy | How To Get There
Write to the Editor for editorial enquiry or Sales Department for sales and advertising enquiry. Copyright © 2008 NST Online. All rights reserved.

web stats