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Easy prey: how death stalks China's zoo animals

English.news.cn   2010-03-25 18:43:18 FeedbackPrintRSS

DEATH IN CAPTIVITY

Xinhua reporters Wednesday filmed a 20-square-meter pit, 3 meters deep, where dead animals were dumped instead of being cremated as required by law, at the Harbin Northern Forest Zoo, in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province.

Formerly the Harbin Zoo in the provincial capital's downtown area, it was moved more than 40 km from the urban area in September 2004.

Manager Li Xiaowei said the zoo lacked cash to build an animal incinerator.

Fourteen big animals, including tigers, lions and leopards, died over a span of three months in the first half of 2008 at the zoo, said Zhang Xinru, in charge of the feeding.

Li admitted big carnivores, such as tigers, had been fed with chicken bones instead of expensive beef or lamb, which had made the animals weak.

"We have a funding shortfall of about 5 million yuan a year, despite government subsidies of 8 million to 10 million yuan a year," he said.

"The government will stop providing subsidies to the zoo by 2012, when the zoo is scheduled to be privatized."

Zoo worker Liu Xiaomi said, "The food is just enough to keep the animals alive."

As well as being malnourished, the animals were also denied veterinary care.

One zoo worker, on condition of anonymity, told how a Mongolian gazelle had contracted an unidentified infectious disease, but the zoo could not afford veterinary treatment. The illness spread, killing more than 20 Mongolian gazelles and deer.

PERFORMING FOR FOOD

Malnourished animals were also reported by Yan Zhanfang, a zookeeper in Kuerle City, in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

She said conditions at Kuerle Zoo deteriorated after its relocation from the downtown area to an outlying district in 2009. Tigers and lions were among the animals suffering from an impoverished diet.

At Guilin Xiongsen Bear and Tiger Park established in 1993 in Guilin City, southwest China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, managers had begun leasing out some of it 1,500 tigers to perform in circus-type acts in order to raise money to feed them.

Owner Zhou Weisen said the park had received 7.5 million yuan in funding from the state forestry authorities since 2002, but 360 tigers were leased out to ensure cashflows.

The animals in the Shenyang zoo have been properly fed now after Shenyang municipal government allocated 7 million yuan (1.03 million U.S. dollars) to fund the zoo, which is mainly privately owned with the Shenyang government having a 15-percent stake.

Xie with the CAZG said the authorities should intensify the supervision of investors' ability and actions in animal care, and promptly revoke their business permits if animals are badly treated.

"Zoos should be treated as public welfare organizations to protect animals," said Xie. "Once they become profit-making organizations, they can no longer guarantee the animal welfare.

"If the situation does not change, more animals will die," Xie said. Enditem

(Xinhua correspondents Wang Jun in Liaoning, Wang Mian in Guangxi, Cao Jiyang in Heilongjiang and Zhou Changqing in Jilin contributed to the story.)

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Editor: Li Xianzhi
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