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The authors were quick to stress, however, that the people who admitted to killing orangutans said they'd only done so once or twice over the course of their lives. "Orangutans are not part of people's day-to-day diet," said Meijaard, a senior adviser for the People and Nature Consulting International. Indonesian Forestry Ministry spokesman Ahmad Fauzi Masyhud said his office has not yet received the report, which he described as "bombastic." "We have to recheck whether it is true or not," he said. "But frankly I doubt it." But Meijaard said it's time to face up to the facts. "We used robust scientific methods to assess the social dimensions of orangutan conservation," he said. "Unless we assume that most of the survey respondents lied, we have to accept the hunting issue as an uncomfortable truth that needs to be addressed if we want to save the orangutan." He said he's seen far too many orangutan skulls, skins and chopped off hands, and heard too many firsthand accounts of people having killed or eaten orangutans, to believe it isn't happening.
[Associated
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