Indonesian men admit to beheading and shooting orangutan 17 times but claim self-defense: police

The headless body of a male Bornean orangutan was found floating in a river in Central Kalimantanon Mon, Jan 15, 2017. Photo courtesy of Central Kalimantan Conservation Agency.
The headless body of a male Bornean orangutan was found floating in a river in Central Kalimantanon Mon, Jan 15, 2017. Photo courtesy of Central Kalimantan Conservation Agency.

Two Indonesian men arrested for shooting an orangutan multiple times and then decapitating it before tossing the corpse into a river, have told investigators they acted in self-defense, police said Thursday.

The suspects, both rubber plantation workers on the island of Borneo, admitted they killed the critically endangered male Bornean orangutan whose headless body was found last month.

Its hair was burned off its body which was riddled with at least 17 bullet wounds.

Pictures of the beheaded corpse floating by the riverbank quickly spread online and sparked an angry reaction from animal rights activists, among others.

“They claimed they killed the orangutan because they were scared to see such a big animal suddenly coming their way,” Central Borneo police chief Anang Revandoko told AFP.

“The investigation is still ongoing,” he added.

Orangutans can grow to the size of humans and have enormously powerful arms but are not known to attack unless their habitat is threatened.

Investigators said they seized a machete allegedly used to attack the animal, whose body was discovered by a local villager.

“The men shot the animal multiple times but (they said) it didn’t die,” Revandoko said.

“One of them then decapitated it from behind. Then they buried its head in the backyard of their house and dumped the body in the river.”

If convicted, the suspects, who are 32 and 41, could face up to five-years in jail under Indonesia’s conservation law, he added.

Bornean and Sumatran orangutans are listed as critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

The Sumatran orangutan population is estimated to be just under 15,000, while about 54,000 orangutans are thought to live in Borneo, according to the IUCN.

Rampant logging and the rapid expansion of palm oil plantations have been blamed for destroying their jungle habitat.

Plantation workers and villagers are sometimes known to attack an animal that many see as a pest, while poachers also capture them to sell as pets.



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