The Phnom Penh Post

Australian presenter to help stuck Indonesian crocodile

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AUSTRALIAN presenter Matthew Nicolas Wright together with his fellow crocodile observer Chris Wilson have officially joined the Central Sulawesi Natural Resources Conservati­on Agency ( BKSDA Central Sulawesi) to assist in the rescue of a wild crocodile that has had a motorcycle tyre stuck around its neck for years in Indonesia’s Palu river.

The participat­ion of the two Australian­s is based on a decree issued by the Environmen­t and Forestry Ministry on Monday to BKSDA Central Sulawesi, into whose operationa­l control the crocodile rescue team has been entrusted.

“After consulting with the ministry’s biodiversi­ty conservati­on directorat­e general, both of them were allowed to immediatel­y join the rescue team,” Haruna, a BKSDA Central Sulawesi official, told reporters on Monday.

Wright and Wilson were reportedly still in Ja karta and would immediatel­y head to Palu to join the rescue team. The rescue operation will start when t he t wo arrive.

In his Instagram post on Sunday, however, Wright was seen walking along the river bank upon arriving in Palu on his first day. He said in the post that he would fly to Jakarta on Monday to meet and coordinate with Indonesian officials.

While waiting for Wright, Haruna said the team was preparing all the necessitie­s including equipment and the most appropriat­e strategy to catch the crocodile and release the tyre from its neck.

The 4m long reptile was first seen swimming with the tyre around its neck in 2016.

The crocodile was regularly spotted swimming in the water connecting the Palu river to Palu bay. Officials and conservati­onists previously tried but failed to catch it.

Locals believe the crocodile was frightened off because every time there was a rescue attempt, dozens of curious Palu residents swarmed around the river to watch the process.

In 2018, M Panji, better known as “Panji the Adventurer”, an animal handler and tamer who is known from his stint on the Adventures of Panji national television show, attempted to catch the crocodile but failed.

Last month, Centra l Sulawesi governor Longki Djanggola warned t he agency to immediatel­y rescue the crocodile because the motorcycle t y re had been stuck in t he crocodile’s neck for too long and might endanger its life.

“I am surprised. I have repeatedly told [the agency] to rescue the crocodile, but the instructio­n seems to have been ignored. This time I emphasise that we must act immediatel­y or I will act myself,” said Longki.

Following that order, the agency held a contest for anyone willing to catch the crocodile, promising a prize as a reward, as a result of its limited resources.

However, the contest was later cancelled after the agency failed to gain a positive response, so it prepared a special team with the assistance of the Ministry of Environmen­t and Forestry.

BKSDA Centra l Sulawesi t hen coordinate­d wit h severa l par t ies volunteer ing to joi n t he rescue tea m, including crocodi le obser vers Wright a nd Wilson.

The team includes members from the police and it has installed nets at several points in the Palu river in the past week, which have so far failed to capture the crocodile.

“Wemightbea­bletocaptu­rethecroco­dile if people do not gather around to watch it because it might make the crocodile afraid to come to the surface,” said Haruna.

 ?? AFP ?? The 4m long crocodile was first seen swimming with the tyre around its neck in 2016.
AFP The 4m long crocodile was first seen swimming with the tyre around its neck in 2016.

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