Khlong
Charoen Wai is a small village in the Chachoengsao province in
central Thailand. The village is facing serious trouble from
invaders, with the village homes being raided, property pinched and
locals attacked by dastardly gangs operating beyond the law. The
village officials, or police or even armed forces are not of much
help because the perpetrators are monkeys, not men.
These
monkeys known as long-tailed macaques or sea monkeys are extremely
intelligent and resourceful. Macaques are known to adjust their
behavior quite well, they learn in similar ways as humans and when
they know that they can find food in a village, they come.
Most
of the monkeys from Khlong Charoen Wai village spend their days
hanging out on the narrow bamboo bridges that meander across the
coastal swampland at the edge of the village.Mothers lounge with
babies slung across their chests, while others leap between nearby
mangrove trees. They tend to flee when approached, but when nobody is
around and looking, they climb on roofs, leaving trails of muddy
footprints as they stalk into homes through any openings they can
find.
Residents
have been forced to seal their houses with nets, lock their windows
despite the tropical heat, and secure their property the best they
can. People are trying their best to devise a variety of anti-monkey
devices such as homemade lock for the fridge and for deterrence,
sling-shots. They have been forced to seal their houses with nets,
lock their windows despite the tropical heat, and secure their
property the best they can. A village resident, Chaluay Khamkajit
says: “They pushed over a 21-inch television, which fell and
smashed. They even stole a rice cooker, managed to open it and
scooped out the rice to eat. They creep into my house when they see
me sleeping, they go into the kitchen and take cooking oil, sugar and
even the medicines that I hide in a cabinet.” Another 72 year
resident says: “They took my snacks, I can buy new ones, but the
medicines are important to me.” Local authorities even have tried
to curb to reduce the number of monkeys by attempting to sterilize
the intruders. But the effort has failed as the number of the monkeys
is too large.
What
are the reasons for this monkey trouble, which about 150 households
are facing? The village they live, falls within the shrimp farming
community in Chachoengsao province on the east coast, 80 kilometers
from Bangkok. There has been a great increase in the number of shrimp
farms, which has been done at the cost of associated deforestation.
World Wildlife Fund says that between 1973 and 2009, Thailand has
lost some 43 percent of its natural woodland with the result that
then villagers have encroached on the monkeys’ habitat in reality
and monkeys have not encroached on human habitat. People have moved
closer to nature, resulting in an increased interaction between
humans and animals. The monkeys, who could easily find food in the
forests earlier now try to find it in people’s houses. The headman
of village, Khlong Charoen Wai, Chatree Kaencharoen, says
“Sometimes, a few hundred monkeys come at once, especially at dawn
and dusk when it is cooler. They know it is time to be fed,” as he
expresses frustration at some villagers who give food to the
incorrigible creatures.
I find
this story from a small obscure village in Thailand, very relevant.
In the Maharashtra state of India, where I live, the occasional
visits of leopards in the fringe villages located on forest borders
has increased as they look to farmer's cattle as an easy prey. The
other day, I saw a report on TV that talked about higher number of
reptiles visiting houses in desert areas of Australia, because the
rodents have shifted their base to people's homes because of easy
availability of food. All these occurrences are really just the
different symptoms of the same malaise, humans encroaching upon
habitats of the animals. I read recently a report by a conservation
group that says that demand for farmland could strip a third of its
remaining forest cover over the next two decades without swift
government action, in the the Greater Mekong region of Indochina
consisting of Thailand, Cambodia, Myanmar, Laos and Vietnam.
This
only points out to severity of the problem we face. It is no longer
just some monkey trouble.
3rd
September 2013
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