International Animal Rescue
Dedicated to the rescue and rehabilitation of suffering animals

Annual Review 2007

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IAR News

June 2000

Boat donated by IAR to Malta Police

Max and the Administrative Law Enforcement (ALE) section of the Malta Police International Animal Rescue (IAR) and the Administrative Law Enforcement (ALE) section of the Malta Police enjoy a very good working relationship. Helping each other in their respective work and co-operating to better the protection of birds in Malta.

During one of our meetings the police told us that one of the biggest problems they had was their inability to chase hunters at sea. Hunters in Malta go out to sea equipped with high powered boats and the Police did not have access to suitable patrol boats to persue them. John Hicks promised that he would do his best to equip the police force with the right type of boat.

In 1996 the ALE section of the Malta Police were presented with a purpose designed rigid inflatable patrol boat to aid the Police in their job at sea. It has produced results during the last three years and several offenders have been brought before the Court of Justices.

The new boat in actionWhen hunters see the boat in their vicinity they stop their illegal hunting. Simply the presence of the boat at sea is an indication that the Police were in the area providing a useful deterrent.

The Police have been able to do a lot of good work with this boat but on some occasions we demand much more. There was a period when the boat could only be used during the weekends because the Government rationed the amount of petrol used for the boat. The Police could use it only during the weekends when the majority of the hunters go out at sea. Because of political pressure the boat was not being used as it should. IAR Malta had talks with the authorities concerned and currently the boat is being used much more effectively than in recent years.

Sea shooting is one of the big problems which the Malta Police have to face. Following reports in the Maltese press by IAR regarding the number of birds still being illegally massacred at sea, one of the hunters federations appealed to the police to increase their patrols and bring the offenders to the book. This must be one of the few cases where a hunters association has asked the Police to step up their actions.

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August 2008
Volunteer gives glowing report of her time in Goa
Gal Marwitz from Israel has given a glowing account of the time she spent volunteering at IAR’s clinic and rescue centre in Goa.

July 2008
Wildlife traders sent to prison in Indonesia
Following a joint raid earlier this year by the Forestry Department, International Animal Rescue and the Institute of Animal Advocacy (LASA), two traders in Jatinegara market, Jakarta, Indonesia were arrested.

June 2008
Update on IAR’s work in Indonesia
As well as macaques and slow lorises, our team in Indonesia has ended the suffering of a number of endangered Javan gibbons living in misery in a centre known as Cikananga.

June 2008
Goa vets examine hawksbill sea turtle
In June the vets at the International Animal Rescue centre in Goa had an unusual patient in the form of a giant Hawksbill sea turtle.

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