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Thai deer found dead with 7kg of 'underwear, plastic bags' in stomach
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The
10-year-old deer was found dead with various items inside its stomach
|
Men's
underwear, plastic bags, instant coffee sachets and parts of plastic rope were
among the things found inside the male deer's stomach.
A
Khun Sathan National Park official said the deer had been eating plastic for a
"long time" before it died.
Earlier
this year, a baby dugong in Thailand died after eating plastic.
Mariam the dugong won hearts in Thailand after photos of her
rescue went viral. But she died just months after, with an autopsy showing that
plastic had caused obstructions in her stomach.
'Have some responsibility'
On
25 November, an officer who was on patrol found the 10-year-old male deer in
the Khun Sathan National Park in the northern district of Na Noi.
Also
found in its stomach were rubber gloves, instant noodles and a small towel.
"We
believed it had been eating those plastics for a long time before it
died," Kriangsak Thanompun, a director at the National Park, Wildlife and
Plant Conservation Department told Thai.
"Officials
[believe] the plastics had blocked up its alimentary canal [but a] further
investigation [will be] launched."
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Some
7kg of rubbish was found inside the deer
|
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Plastic
bags and food waste were among the items found
|
On social media, many criticised park-goers who had littered.
"When you go into a national park, take your rubbish back. Have
some responsibility," one comment on Facebook said.
Another said it would be hard to get people to pick up after themselves.
"This is something that has to be taught and implemented since a
young age. By the time they are adults, it is hard [to change]," another
said.
According to Mr Kriangsak, a "three-phase plan" would be put
in place, aimed at getting local people to collect plastics and other rubbish
in the national park area.
The plan will also look into setting up a committee to deal with waste
management and eventually, aim to educate the public on litter prevention.
- Turtles eat plastic they mistake for sea grass
- Dead whale had eaten 80 plastic bags
- Attenborough: World 'changing habits' on plastic
Thailand is a major user of plastic bags.
Environmental group Greenpeace says that some 75 billion pieces of
plastic bags are thrown away each year in Thailand.
The country's environment minister had in September said that major
retailers in Thailand would stop providing single-use plastic bags from January
2020 on.
Additional
reporting by Watchiranot Thongtep and Smitanan Yongstar




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