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Komodo Island to be closed in 2020: Agency

The island and the species are in dire need of rehabilitation, but the residents say the closure would leave them unemployed.

News Desk (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Thu, July 18, 2019

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Komodo Island to be closed in 2020: Agency Young Komodo dragon walking in the wild on Komodo Island. (Shutterstock/Kjersti Joergensen)

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ast Nusa Tenggara (NTT) Tourism Agency head Wayan Darmawa announced on Thursday that Komodo Island is to close by the beginning of 2020.

“It is definite; we have decided to close Komodo Island next year,” Wayan said, as reported by Antara news agency.

The closure is intended for the environmental rehabilitation of the island and to improve the conservation efforts for the Komodo dragons .

Wayan said the decision was made by the NTT administration and the Environment and Forestry Ministry on Wednesday, adding that President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo has agreed to the matter.

On his visit to Labuan Bajo on July 10 and 11, Jokowi said there should be a visitor limit on the island considering it was a conservation area. He suggested nearby Rinca Island as an alternative for visitors wishing to see Komodo dragons. The island is also a natural habitat of the dragon and is included in the Komodo National Park.

NTT Governor Viktor B Laiskodat said the administration would provide a budget of Rp 100 billion (US$7.17 million) for the island's rehabilitation.

Read also: January 2020 closure of Komodo Island not yet final

On Wednesday, the plan was met with a protest from residents in West Manggarai regency in front of the regency office, regional council office and the Komodo National Park Agency.

The protesters objected to the plan to remove residents from the island, as proposed by the governor.

Ihsan Abdul Amir, one of the protesters, said that residents living within the national park had supported the island's conservation efforts and tourism development for years. 

“We have long been involved in the conservation-based tourism. The island's closure will deprive us of our source of income," said Ihsan said as quoted by kompas.com.

Ihsan added that the residents have relinquished their lands to the Komodo National Park and switched professions to the tourism sector. (gis/wng)

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