The Cairns Post

Education ‘key to stopping dugong poachers’

- DANIEL BATEMAN

THE head of Cairns’ Papua New Guinean community has called for better education for those living on both sides of the border in the Torres Strait to manage traditiona­l take of dugongs.

The Australian Crime Intelligen­ce Commission’s $2 million investigat­ion into the illegal trade of dugong and sea turtle meat in the Far North found that hunters from PNG’s Treaty Villages were targeting dugongs outside the provisions of the Torres Strait Treaty.

The Cairns Post reported yesterday that the commission feared this illegal activity could contribute to dwindling population­s of the species in the region.

PNG and Wantoks Associatio­n Cairns president Dianne Austrai-Ombiga believed education was key to preventing the conflict over wildlife management at the border between Australia and PNG from continuing.

“I think people on the PNG Western Province border need to be educated about the treaty,” she said.

“There are conditions of that treaty, and they need to be clearly understood.

“If that’s not understood, then an effort needs to be made to educate all people on both sides of the border, to understand that.”

When contacted yesterday, Greenpeace said it did not know enough about the issue to comment directly.

But Greenpeace senior campaigner Nathaniel Pelle said the organisati­on respected and supported the rights of indigenous peoples to pursue cultural activities, including hunting and traditiona­l resource management.

“Experts say dugongs are doing better in areas like the Torres Strait and Far North than they are in more urban environmen­ts where habitat loss, and ship strike is the major threat to them,” he said.

“The Torres Strait supports the world’s biggest dugong population and hunting has been carried out there for thousands of years prior to colonisati­on.”

 ??  ?? ON TARGET: Mr Entsch is all smiles with Taipans player Nathan Jawai after scoring a basket following the sod-turning ceremony.
ON TARGET: Mr Entsch is all smiles with Taipans player Nathan Jawai after scoring a basket following the sod-turning ceremony.

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