The Phnom Penh Post

Indonesia scraps plans to close komodo dragon island

-

INDONESIA has scrapped plans to ban tourists from an island home to komodo dragons and will instead limit visitor numbers and raise entry prices to create a “premium destinatio­n”, officials said.

A plan announced last year would have seen Komodo national park close from the start of 2020, over concerns that the giant lizard species were suffering from the effects of mass tourism.

But the mooted closure sparked concern in the area’s tourism industry and could have meant relocating a couple thousand island residents. It also did not apply to nearby islands where the giant, slavering carnivores are also found.

Indonesian environmen­t minister Siti Nurbaya said on Monday t hat the park would not be closed.

“We will just turn it into a worldclass holiday destinatio­n,” she added in a statement.

Last yea r, t he reg ion’s gover nor sparked a controvers­y when he proposed charging v isitors $ 500 to see the dragons, about 50 times the current $10 entrance fee.

Maritime minister Luhut Pandjaitan said on Monday that a new quota system would be introduced to limit the number of visitors to the island, amid concerns that tourism was putting too much stress on the lizards.

There have also been concerns about declining numbers of deer, boars and other natural prey, as well as attempts to smuggle the lizards.

Thousa nds of tou r ists a nnua l ly descend on t he cluster of islands in the eastern part of the countr y – the only place in the world where komodo dragons ca n be seen i n t hei r natura l habitat.

The islands are home to nearly 2,900 dragons, which can grow to around 3m in length. An adult typically weighs from 70 to 90kg.

Tourism ministry spokesman Guntur Sakti said on Tuesday that the islands would be turned into a “premium destinatio­n”, without elaboratin­g.

“It is important to provide certainty so that the tourism industry is not hampered in its work,” he added.

Indonesia has launched a push to replicate Bali’s success across the Southeast Asian archipelag­o, including trying to draw more visitors to Lake Toba on Sumatra island as well as ancient Buddhist and Hindu temples.

 ?? AFP ?? A group of Komodo dragons are fed in the Surabaya zoo in Surabaya, East Java in March .
AFP A group of Komodo dragons are fed in the Surabaya zoo in Surabaya, East Java in March .

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia