Indonesian police have arrested a suspected wildlife smuggler after
discovering nearly two dozen rare birds, mostly yellow-crested
cockatoos, jammed inside plastic water bottles in his luggage.
The
37-year-old man was stopped by police on Monday as he alighted from a
passenger ship in Surabaya, a city on the man island of Java.
Photographs
show the birds, with distinctive yellow plumage, peering out of the
bottles after being found by officers. The bottoms of the bottles had
been cut off to squeeze the birds inside.
The head of the
criminal investigation unit at the Tanjung Perak port, Aldy Sulaiman,
said police found the live birds stashed inside the man's luggage.
"We found 21 yellow-crested cockatoos and one green parrot," he said.
"All the birds were found inside water bottles, which were packed in a crate."
The birds have since been sent to Indonesia's natural resources
conservation office, which deals with wildlife-trafficking cases.
Sulaiman
said the man -- whose identity was not disclosed in line with normal
criminal procedure in Indonesia -- had admitted to carrying two birds
for a friend but claimed to know nothing about the other animals.
If found guilty of smuggling, the man, from near Surabaya, could face up to five years in prison.
Yellow-crested
cockatoos are native to Indonesia and neighbouring East Timor and
considered critically endangered, according to the International Union
for Conservation of Nature.
They are different to the larger and more common sulphur-crested cockatoo which is mostly found in Australia and New Guinea.
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