Bangkok Post

Poachers kill endangered grey langurs

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HANOI: Poachers in Vietnam have shot dead five critically endangered langurs, a type of monkey killed for bushmeat and traditiona­l medicine, state media said yesterday.

Rangers and police found the dead grey-shanked douc langurs during a regular patrol of forests in Quang Ngai province.

Restricted to the forests of central Vietnam, the known global population of this type of langur is less than 1,000, according to conservati­on group Fauna and Flora Internatio­nal (FFI). Other conservati­on groups estimate their number may be higher as some habitat areas have not yet been surveyed.

The primate is a regular victim of the illegal wildlife trade, and is sought after for bushmeat, traditiona­l medicine and the pet trade, FFI says. They are also threatened by deforestat­ion. It is listed as “critically endangered”, the highest risk category under the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).

In Quang Ngai, the poachers ran off, leaving behind a motorbike, bullets and silencers, VN Express news site said in a report. Local authoritie­s are “looking into the case”, it added.

The grey-shanked douc langur is listed in Vietnam’s “red book”, making it a criminal offence to kill one. But law enforcemen­t is a huge issue.

“Authoritie­s must find those responsibl­e,” said Ha Thang Long, director of GreenViet, which works in biodiversi­ty conservati­on in Vietnam’s central regions. “If we fail to... bring them to justice, this will continue to happen.”

Under Vietnamese law, poachers in such a case could face seven years in jail, he added.

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