Local tastes for traditional delicacy threaten the animals' survival.
On the uninhabited Maldivian island of Gaadhoo, green turtle eggs lie buried in the sand, waiting to hatch. Sea turtle ranger Ibrahim Inaan visits three times a week to monitor their progress, but the fear is that only half of the estimated 100 eggs in each nest will hatch, allowing the newborn turtles to cross the few meters of beach to the Indian Ocean. The other half will be eaten in omelets, porridge or pancakes. FULL STORY from Nikkei Asia
God, increase in me that wisdom which discovers my truest interest; strengthen my resolution to perform that which wisdom dictates. Amen. - އަޅުގަނޑުގެ އެންމެ ހެޔޮލާބަޔާއި މަންފާ ދެނެގަނެވޭ ޙިކުމަތް އަޅުގަނޑަށް އިތުރުކޮށްދެއްވާނދޭވެ އަޅުގަނޑުގެ ވެރި ރަސްކަލާކޮ! އަދި އެ ޙިކުމަތުން އަންގަވާ ކަންތައްތައް ކުރުމުގެ ޢަޒުމާއި ހިތްވަރު އަޅުގަނޑަށް ވަރުގަދަކޮށްދެއްވާނދޭވެ! އާމީން.
I condemn hypocrisy in all its forms - މުނާފިގުކަމުގެ ހުރިހާ ސިފައެއް އަހަރެން ކުށްވެރިކުރަމެވެ
Friday, July 21, 2023
Maldives fights to keep turtle eggs off dining tables
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