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Indonesian rubber plantation workers claim self-defence after shooting, beheading endangered orangutan

Pictures of the animal’s corpse floating by the riverbank quickly spread online and sparked an angry reaction from animal rights activists

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Environmental activists call for protections for endangered orangutans. Two rubber plantation workers claimed self-defence after killing one of the animals. Photo: EPA

Two Indonesian men arrested for shooting an orangutan multiple times and then decapitating it before tossing the corpse into a river, have told investigators they acted in self-defence, police said on Thursday.

The suspects, both rubber plantation workers on the island of Borneo, admitted they killed the critically endangered male Bornean orangutan whose headless body was found last month.

Its hair was burned off its body which was riddled with at least 17 bullet wounds.

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Pictures of the beheaded corpse floating by the riverbank quickly spread online and sparked an angry reaction from animal rights activists, among others.

“They claimed they killed the orangutan because they were scared to see such a big animal suddenly coming their way,” Central Borneo police chief Anang Revandoko told AFP.

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“The investigation is still ongoing,” he added.

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