[FEL-L] China's Zoos: 'Asylums For Animals

BigCatSimba at aol.com BigCatSimba at aol.com
Wed May 23 12:15:38 CDT 2007


This is Just awful :-(

China's Zoos: 'Asylums For Animals'
By Peter Sharp,
China Correspondent
Updated: 17:57, Tuesday May 22, 2007  
China's zoos have been described as "insane asylums for animals" and a 
national disgrace, where live domestic pets are fed to lions and tigers for the 
entertainment of visitors.

 
(Picture)
 
Animals are trained to perform tricks

Animal rights activists have told Sky News that in 10 years of monitoring 
animals' living conditions there has been "no improvement". 
Campaigner Dr John Wederburn said: "I come back to the same zoo four or  five 
years later and the same animals are still trapped in the same tiny cage. 
"It's called zoo-chosis. The animals are simply driven out of their minds by 
the boredom." 
Stage shows, in which bears are trained to twirl sticks of fire and ride 
motorcycles, came in for particular criticism. 
At one zoo, a three-year-old bear was put in a dress and a harness to pull a 
car twice a day in front of the holiday crowds. 
 
 
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Meanwhile, a trip round the Harbin Wildlife Park in Northern China ends with 
a gruesome spectacle. 
The world's biggest breeding centre for Siberian tigers encourages visitors 
to buy domestic animals that will be fed live to the tigers. 
Special vending flaps are fitted on the tourist buses to allow visitors to 
feed chickens to the waiting tigers. 
A live chicken can be purchased for £2.60, while a cow costs £100. 
The authorities at the park say the tigers are being trained to be released 
back into the wild and argue that the fees charged for the live animals are 
used to support the park. 
(Picture) 
 
Sky News' Peter Sharp reports

But Dr Wederburn has described the practice as "medieval", while the _World 
Society for the Protection of Animals _ (http://www.wspa.org.uk/) also 
condemned it. 
Virginia McKenna, of the wildlife charity _Born Free_ 
(http://www.bornfree.org.uk/) , said: "With the Olympic Games just a year away, China has a short 
window of opportunity to tackle these issues. 
"(It) faces the very real possibility that many of the millions of sports 
enthusiasts will return not with memories of the Olympic spectacle, nor of 
China's undoubted ancient civilisation and culture... but of the animal welfare 
horrors that still go on, causing such suffering, and offending us all."



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