Zoo Melbourne nafi beri layanan yang buruk terhadap orang utan | BorneoPost Online | Borneo , Malaysia, Sarawak Daily News
the article is in Bahasa Malaysia (I couldn't see an English one on the news feeds), but basically says that Palm Oil Council chief executive Tan Sri Datuk Dr Yusof Basiron is claiming that Melbourne Zoo is keeping orangutans in cruel conditions. The orangutan was seen shivering with cold and screaming in agony because the blanket it had wasn't big enough to provide it with warmth. The Zoo responded by pointing out that the orangs have heated indoor enclosures, are perfectly happy, and the blanket wasn't there to keep them warm but because they like playing with them.
EDIT: here's an English one: http://www.mysinchew.com/node/61432
the article is in Bahasa Malaysia (I couldn't see an English one on the news feeds), but basically says that Palm Oil Council chief executive Tan Sri Datuk Dr Yusof Basiron is claiming that Melbourne Zoo is keeping orangutans in cruel conditions. The orangutan was seen shivering with cold and screaming in agony because the blanket it had wasn't big enough to provide it with warmth. The Zoo responded by pointing out that the orangs have heated indoor enclosures, are perfectly happy, and the blanket wasn't there to keep them warm but because they like playing with them.
EDIT: here's an English one: http://www.mysinchew.com/node/61432
The orang-utans at the Melbourne Zoo are having a swinging time and are not living in deplorable conditions.
Neither are they shivering in Melbourne's freezing temperature and crying out in distress as a result, noted the zoo's conservation director, Rachel Lowry.
Denying allegations by Malaysian Palm Oil Council chief executive Tan Sri Datuk Dr Yusof Basiron that the orang-utans lacked proper treatment, she said their enclosures were built to provide "great climbing structures to encourage their natural behaviours".
"Like all Melbourne Zoo exhibits, the orang-utan exhibit is designed to enable the animals to have their choice of sitting in the shade or sun, in the open or under.
"There is underfloor heating outdoors, their day room exhibit area is kept at 20 degrees, and their night dens are also heated. As with all tropical species displayed at Melbourne Zoo, we meet their need for warmth.
"Their use of sheets or other coverings is behavioural, not a response to the cold. They enjoy lying under sheets or other fabrics, and they even do it in our summer weather," she told Bernama in an interview here today.
She said the zoo celebrated the birthday of the young male, Menyaru, who was born here eight years ago, as part of an international endangered species breeding programme.
Dr Yusof, who visited the zoo last week while on a working mission with Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister Tan Sri Bernard Dompok, had told Bernama the orang-utans were housed in "deplorable conditions".
He had also said he observed the orang-utans shivering in Melbourne's freezing temperature and recognised the noises they made as "cries of distress".
Dr Yusof also said orang-utans were tropical animals and they found it difficult to live in a winter climate.
He said the sack cloth given to the orang-utans at the zoo here to keep them warm was too small to go round their large bodies.