LETTER TO THE EDITOR:
GET SERIOUS AGAINST TURTLE EGG CONSUMPTION
At least once a year, volunteers from the Malaysian Nature Society
assist local turtle conservation and management centres by cleaning up the
premises, sprucing up turtle quarantine ponds and hatcheries, carrying out
beach clean-ups and releasing turtle hatchlings. Our volunteers include
children as young as two, in the hope that our efforts will go a little way
towards ensuring the continued survival of these amazing and gentle marine
animals. A lot of resources have gone into educating the local communities on
the need to protect turtle populations, and discouraging littering, poaching
and turtle egg consumption.
And this is what makes the incident in which Rural and Regional
Development Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob and Beluran UMNO Division
Chief Datuk James Ratib were photographed dining at a restaurant in which large
quantities of turtle eggs were served all the more disheartening and
disappointing. More dispiriting still are the excuses made expressing ignorance,
firstly of what type of eggs were on the table, next, of the menu and the decision
to serve turtle eggs, and then, of the law prohibiting the sale and consumption
of turtle eggs in the state of Sabah. At no point did the Minister express
regret or outrage that the turtle eggs were served, or support for conservation
laws protecting endangered species such as turtles. The Minister’s dismissive
responses and claim of ignorance of the law further reflect poorly on the
mindset of those in a decision-making capacity in relation to issues of
environmental and wildlife conservation and animal protection.
As a Minister with such an important portfolio, his plea of
ignorance – that he was not aware of what eggs they were, that he did not know
turtle eggs would be served, and that he was not aware it was illegal to sell
and consume turtle eggs – is unacceptable. Not only is it clear from the
photographic evidence that the Minister did not object to the fact that turtle eggs
were served and consumed, it is also a matter of concern that he repeatedly
attempted to deflect blame, first to the organisers of the event, then to the
restaurateur, and most recently to unknown and unnamed “outsiders” without
acknowledging that a wildlife crime had been committed, that he had been a
party to it whether intentionally or otherwise, and that he has a duty to
cooperate with the authorities and wildlife NGOs to ensure that action is taken
against those responsible for the offence. Whether or not the Minister had
himself consumed the turtle eggs due to his claim of high cholesterol levels is
less important than the fact that he had witnessed a wildlife offence and did
not feel that it was his responsibility to address or stop it. Malaysian citizens
do not need to know if a Minister has high cholesterol levels. We do, however,
need to know that when an elected representative witnesses a crime, he or she
is willing to call out the guilty parties, stop the crime, prevent a
reoccurrence and do whatever it is within his or her power to ensure laws are
enforced expeditiously and fairly.
Malaysia already has a reputation, internationally, as a hub for
wildlife trafficking, trade and exploitation. Marine pollution, coastal development and
erosion, destructive fishing methods, deliberate poaching and turtle egg
consumption have all contributed to a drastic decline in turtle populations.
According to WWF Malaysia, leatherback turtle populations have declined by more
than 99% and Olive Ridley turtles by more than 95%, while Hawksbill and Green
turtle populations have decreased since the 1970s and only recently appeared to
have stabilised in certain states thanks to concerted conservation, education,
awareness and enforcement efforts. Even with the best of intervention measures,
turtle survival rates remain low, with only an estimated one in a thousand
hatchlings surviving to maturity and breeding age.
I believe I speak for all concerned citizens when I urge that the
state wildlife authorities investigate this matter thoroughly, that all elected
representatives take a firm stance against the exploitation of and trade in
wildlife and endangered species, including but not limited to the consumption
of turtle eggs, and that the sale and consumption of turtle eggs be removed
from state jurisdiction and be made a Federal offence.
The matter at hand is not a political one. The offence is not less
heinous or more easily condoned had it been associated with someone linked with
another political party, or individuals with no political affiliations at all. The
trade in and exploitation of endangered species and the destruction of Malaysia’s
natural heritage should be the concern of all rational and responsible human
beings as denizens of the planet, and not merely the concern of ‘environmental
organisations’ and ‘conservation groups’.
WONG EE LYNN
COORDINATOR,
GREEN LIVING SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP,
MALAYSIAN NATURE SOCIETY, SELANGOR
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