logo

Wednesday 10th of March 2010

facebook-social media

free web counter

PDF Print E-mail

Tiger beer worth more than real tigers in Malaysia
12 February 2010

Kuala Lumpur – We are just a day shy of entering the Year of the Tiger, the year of hope for wild Malayan tigers.

While news of heightened awareness for tigers flood the media, articles about a tiger brutally killed in the Bukit Tapah Forest Reserve in Perak, Malaysia, speak of the harsh reality faced by our Malayan tigers.

Responding to reports that a tiger had attacked an Orang Asli, the Perak Department of Wildlife and National Parks made the gruesome find of a dead tiger with a wire snare still entwined around its severed left forelimb. The tiger was trapped in the snare for a few days, shot in the eyes and other parts of its body and attacked with spears fashioned out of hard palm stalks. It is also believed to have been poisoned.

Seven Orang Asli, including the man who was attacked by the tiger, are now under investigation in connection with this case.

So what will it be for these seven, if they are found guilty under the due process of the law? Will they each receive the maximum sentence of a 5 year jail term and RM15,000 fine for killing a tiger, as provided by the Protection of Wild Life Act 1972? Or another slap on the wrist so the carnage can continue?

In 2005, a man in Tumpat, Kelantan, was found guilty of illegal possession of a dead tiger. The tiger had been butchered into four pieces and stored in his freezer. For that offence, he paid a fine of RM7,000 and walked out a free man.

Clearly, our values are misplaced. Take the case involving the theft of 11 cans of Tiger beer and Guinness Stout worth RM70 in January 2010 where a man was sentenced to five years imprisonment (The Star, 20 Jan 2010, Jobless man gets 5yrs for stealing some beer).

We urge the Attorney-General’s Chambers to treat this case with urgency and importance. The government must put into effect a penalty system that truly matches the severity and unspeakable cruelty of this crime.

Swift enforcement action is highly commendable but will count for little if the guilty parties are let off lightly, as is often the case. It is time to send a clear signal to poachers, middlemen and syndicate operators that Malaysia is serious about protecting its wild tigers.

Surely our tigers are worth more than RM70?

 

MYCAT Secretariat’s Office,
c/o TRAFFIC Southeast Asia, T: +6 03 7880 3940
Unit 3-2, 2nd Floor, Jalan SS 23/11, F: +6 03 7882 0171
Taman SEA, 47400 Petaling Jaya, M: +6 012 3100 594
Selangor, Malaysia E: mycat.so@malayantiger.net

 


Copyright © 2009 Malayantiger.net | Powered by KRISARU