|

|
Army called in to hunt dragon
It was still at large and creating fear amongst the people.
Much of this was owed to the media frenzy over the dangers posed by the
endangered 1.5m long monitor lizard.
People from all corners of the city were talking about the lizard.
Yesterday, a team of nine soldiers assisted by village hunting dogs went
back into the bushes to search for the third day.
Accompanied by provincial disaster officers, quarantine officers and local
village guides, the fully armed soldiers scoured the bushes of Butibam but
could not locate the keen-sensed reptile.
New sightings were reported in the bushes further away from Butibam towards
Malahang last Saturday evening while the search of a main suspect’s house by
police late last Friday was in vain.
Police obtained a search warrant after the owner denied them a thorough
check of his high-fenced and suspicion-raising premises at Eriku.
Police and authorities are still baffled as to the identity of the person
alleged to have brought the animal into PNG.
A witness from Butibam revealed being taken to the police station to
identify two witnesses but said these were not the person she saw for a
brief moment. Police said the only hope of finding the smuggler would be
from eyewitness identification and were calling on anyone with information
leading to his identification, to come forward.
Four youths residing at Busurum Compound claimed to have briefly sighted the
dragon while at the garden and screamed in terror.
Rikas Poka, 18, said: “It was after 5pm and we decided to chew sugarcane
before heading for the house when we heard someone cutting grass.”
His friend Angas Kisia thought it was his mother as their garden was nearby
and went over to check.
“I saw something drop suddenly and I turned and saw this massive body like a
small coconut trunk with brown skin and a very long tail slide through the
grass … it moved so fast … I screamed …” Angas said.
His screams brought his friends who were nearby and they arrived to see the
animal’s tail disappear among the grass.
A family claimed sighting the animal three weeks prior to it being reported
in the media.
Footprints allegedly belonging to the monitor, have also been sighted.
Villagers from Butibam, Kamkumung, Yanga and Wagang as well as all
settlements in between were not going to gardens and rivers during the day
and living in fear at night.
Although they noted with stifled glee that there was a marked drop in crime
at night, they were still scared.
The komodo is an endangered species endemic to Indonesia and is protected by
the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).
|
 |
|



 |