Komodo Island Is Closing Because People Keep Stealing its Dragons

Tourists will be banned from visiting the Indonesian island as of January 2020.

Image via Shutterstock

This article originally appeared on VICE AU

The Indonesian government has announced it will close the island of Komodo to tourists next year in a bid to prevent people from stealing its dragons. In a meeting with the Ministry of Environment and Forestry last week, East Nusa Tenggara provincial administration spokesman Marius Jelamud declared that “Komodo island will be shut down temporarily in January 2020,” Tempo reports, with the closure expected to stay in place for at least 12 months.

The decision comes just days after East Java Police busted a smuggling ring that took 41 komodo dragons and tried to sell them on the international black market for 500 million rupiah (about AU$50,000) a piece. Senior Commander Akhmad Yusep Gunawan, special crimes unit head of the East Java Police, said five baby komodos had also been rescued from the group of alleged animal traffickers. “The criminals intended to ship the animals to three countries in Southeast Asia through Singapore,” Yusep told reporters last week, according to The Jakarta Post.

Indonesian authorities further arrested five smugglers on Java for allegedly trafficking komodo dragons along with bearcats, cockatoos, and cassowaries. “The suspect sold the komodos online through Facebook,” East Java police spokesman Frans Barung Mangera said in a statement, while police commissioner Rofiq Ripto Himawan told Channel News Asia that they were usually smuggled overseas to Asian buyers. “These animals are sold for traditional medicine,” said Rofiq. “Komodo dragons could be used to make an antibiotic.”

Considered to be the world’s largest lizard, komodo dragons are one of the most endangered species on the planet. The UNESCO World Heritage Komodo National Park, in East Nusa Tenggara, is the only place where the reptiles can be seen in their natural habitat—and while the remainder of the park will stay open to visitors throughout 2020, authorities are closing the gates on Komodo in the hope of launching a conservation program and bolstering the local dragon population. UNESCO figures state that there are currently about 5,700 komodos spread throughout the Park.

ADVERT

6 thoughts on “Komodo Island Is Closing Because People Keep Stealing its Dragons

  1. It ceases to amaze me just how cruel and heartless humans can be. That aside, do they really think this is going to stop them?

    • I don’t know what to say. Just when you think you’ve heard everything. Are humans de-evolving back into the primordial slime or what?

  2. Traditional medicine again. These people are really dumb, aren’t they?
    Apparently years of research and repeated testing from teams of people of an educated scientific background doesn’t hold a candle to superstitions.

Leave a comment