Increase Textsize Decrease Textsize   Email to a friend

Poachers pillaging dugong and turtles

Carenda Jenkin

Friday, August 28, 2009

© The Cairns Post

 

POACHERS are killing dugongs and turtles near Cairns and selling the meat illegally for up to $50 a kilogram.

Rangers have also found rotting carcasses of the protected animals at the Yarrabah dump and nearby beaches south of Cairns this month.

These are believed to be discarded by poachers after taking the "good meat" for sale.

Reports of the black market trade and mass killings of the animals have left Yarrabah elders reeling at the waste of food, the abuse of traditional rights and ruining sustainability for future generations.

A Gunggandji clan traditional owner, who has inside knowledge of the racketeering, said the dumpings could be related to the black market trade in the Far North.

"They are swapping turtle meat for cash at Gordonvale, Innisfail and Cairns with prices ranging from $25/kg, or name your price," he said.

"They pay top price for dugong. Yes, about $50 and again, name your price. We want to catch them out in the act.

"This is not our culture. We are not too happy about this at all. We eat everything and leave the bones or shell behind but they are letting good meat rot.

"These are people who live in Yarrabah and are not traditional people."

Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, police and the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service are investigating the reports at Yarrabah.

"The (authority) cannot comment any further on the specifics of these investigations," a GBRMPA spokesperson said.

Department of Environment and Resource Management North Queensland Marine Parks regional manager Richard Quincey said officers found no evidence of dugong carcasses at the dump.

Mr Quincey said there had been reports of dugong taken at Yarrabah over the weekend of August 15 and 16.

North Queensland Land Council chairman Terry O'Shane said traditional owners or not, "they should be prosecuted".

He said residents at Yarrabah and other Aboriginal communities should "dob in" those who were involved in illegal
activities.

Former Yarrabah mayor Vince Mundraby said traditional owners needed to have a direct line of communication with all tiers of governments about land and sea matters.

Mr Mundraby said the string of incidents at Yarrabah was not surprising.

"There is no regional plan to manage natural resources with this council," he said.

Aborigines have the right to kill limited turtle and dugong with a permit for ceremonial purposes, in recognition of a 40,000-year-old custom.

The State Government's Nature Conservation (Wildlife) Regulation 2006 lists dugongs as "vulnerable to extinction".

 


Under threat: Poachers are killing dugongs and turtles in ­waters close to Cairns and are illegally selling the meat for up to $50 a kilogram.


also in

New Jetstar flights between Cairns and Osaka

THE re-introduction of Jetstar's four weekly direct services to Osaka in Japan and a doubling of flights to Melbourne from April 1 next year are the first significant announcements today by the airline as the result of a new agreement with Cairns Airport.

Add Comment

Kate earns National Pride Medal

INSPIRING young leader and cancer survivor Kate Smith could hardly believe she won a national Pride of Australia medal last night.

Add Comment

Pictures: Cairns' Pride of Australia Medal finalists

Abbott wins in leadership spill

BREAKING NEWS: Tony Abbott is the new Opposition Leader.

View Comments

Escapee back in custody

BREAKING NEWS: Police have found a man who escaped from police custody at Ravenshoe on Sunday night.

Add Comment

Woman watched boyfriend bash, strip tourist

THE girlfriend of a man accused of raping and attempting to rape two foreign tourists at a Cairns caravan park says she watched him bash and strip one of them then chase after her. 



Comments

See all comments >>

Comments

We welcome your comments on this story. Comments are submitted for possible publication on the condition that they may be edited. Please provide your full name. We also require a working email address - not for publication, but for verification. The location field is optional. Read our publication guidelines.

Submit your feedback here:

Full name: Email address:
Location (optional):
Your comments:
(max 1200 characters)
  Remember my details

(So you don't have to retype your details each time you send feedback.)

 

Email me if my comment is published

 




Submit to the Cairns post

Picture

Story Tips

Email Us

Contact Us