If you have spare time in the weekdays or especially in weekend and if you are a bird-lover, you can take a walk to Jalan Pramuka in Matraman and Jatinegara in East Jakarta where you can find bird markets among many existing in Jakarta. The birds sold in this market are ranging from local to imported including the rare ones.
For local birds, we can find Java turtledove, yellow orioles, pigeons, Papuan parrots, Bali starlings, Papuan parrots, or some kinds of birds of paradise and canaries. Some traders even have collections of tropically imported birds such as Guatemalan parrots, Mexican parrots, and some other ones. Most birds on sales here are able to sing loudly, which attract customers who mostly love singing birds to come here.
If you step into the market, you will be surprised, because this bird market does not simply sell birds, but also other kinds of animals such as orangutan and Sumatran tiger despite the prohibitions of the government and internationally strict regulations. Others which are on sales are Celebes macaque, a crested macaque, black monkey, and the long-limb gibbons. These animals are smuggled into the market and frequently in poor condition due to the inability of the traders to provide them with nutrient and enough food.
In case you are really interested in certain species, but it is not available, the traders can guarantee you that they can search for the animal in the next few days, and you can come to the spot on the compromised day to buy and take it home. Here in bird markets, there are at least 200 traders who earn money just from buying and selling rare birds and animals.
The Matraman bird market is the biggest in Southeast Asia and was inaugurated by Governor Ali Sadikin in 1975. Initially, it was intended to collect and sell local birds, but as time goes, the traders start selling the exotic and endangered species of birds and animals. The Jatinegara bird market in East Jakarta also sells similar rare birds and animals though on a smaller scale.
Traders of rare birds at Pramuka bird market are under the protection of preman (thugs). The problem keeps on going because regulations are not implementable; demand from foreign countries for rare birds and animals is high; the networks to foreign countries are already established, and people are not quite aware of the importance of maintaining the rare species as the world inheritance.
In commemoration of the World Wildlife Day on October 3, 2010, many people – citizens and also some expatriates – rallied at Hotel Indonesia, Central Jakarta, urging the city government to pay more attention to the illegal bird sales and stop any activities of certain people catching, keeping and selling various kinds of birds, some of which are on the brink of their extinction. Some posters and banners held by the demonstrators during the rally expressed their wishes and concerns such as: “House of birds in the forest, not the bird markets” and “We march against the wildlife trade.”
And how about you?
And how about you?
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