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Published 27 Apr, 2024 06:30am

Capital’s ‘horror zoo’ is reborn as rehab centre

ISLAMABAD: Before it was forced to close over its “intolerable” treatment of animals, the Islamabad Zoo was home to neglected elephants and underfed lions pacing back and forth behind the bars of their enclosures.

Now, four years later, it is a rehabilitation centre for wildlife, providing a refuge for motherless leopard cubs, tigers seized from owners who kept them as status symbols and bears forced to dance or fight for the amusement of crowds.

“The whole energy of the place has changed ever since the zoo was emptied... The care shows; look around,” Islamabad Wildlife Management Board (IWMB) Head Rina Saeed told AFP.

The zoo gained international notoriety in 2016 when the singer Cher launched a campaign to remove its shackled Asian elephant, Kaavan, the last in the country and dubbed the world’s loneliest elephant.

But Kaavan’s treatment wasn’t an isolated incident; two lions died at the facility when zookeepers attempted to force them from their pen by setting fire to piles of hay, and over the years, hundreds of animals listed on the zoo’s inventory simply vanished.

Pakistan’s climate change ministry said it was “seriously concerned” about the “intolerable and inhumane” treatment of animals at the zoo in 2020, the same year the courts ordered it shut down and Kaavan was moved to Cambodia.

Within months of its closure, a small rescue centre began to take root at the facility, and now evidence of its past as a tourist attraction is fading, as silence hangs over the empty, overgrown parking lot and the shabby ticket stand sits idle next to a swing set.

“Now it is a proper rehabilitation centre with over 50 animals,” Saeed said, adding that the team had rescued more than 380 animals.

Amir Khalil, a veterinarian who directs the global animal welfare organisation Four Paws, which oversaw Kaavan’s relocation, recently made an emotional return to the zoo, saying it “now holds hope.”

Vets from the Austria-based NGO had come to the centre to see three black bears whose claws had been removed by their previous owners, treating them in the shadow of an abandoned Ferris wheel in the zoo’s former cafe, now a makeshift clinic.

“This place is unrecognisable,” Khalil told AFP while inspecting one of the animals, an overweight former dancing bear called Anila, who was also suffering from a nose infection from a ring pierced through her snout to help keep her under control.

Last year, the IWMB seized a tiger cub with broken bones from a vet clinic in an upscale neighborhood in the capital, later relocating the animal to South Africa.

“We think animals are toys,” IWMB Research and Planning Deputy Director Ali Sakhawat said.

“No matter how many zoos we make for kids, this won’t teach them that animals are to be taken care of,” said IWMB’s Sakhawat, adding, “Wild animals are to be kept in the wild, not cages.”

The animals brought to the centre are not only physically injured but also mentally traumatised.

“We keep them occupied to help them erase the memories of the trauma inflicted by poachers,” Aneis Hussan, a wildlife ranger, told AFP as he played with Daboo, one of the rescued black bears.

“The bears you’ve observed here exhibit signs of joy, roaming freely and climbing trees - a stark contrast to the captivity that deprived them of happiness,” Hussan added.

A new Islamabad Nature and Wildlife Management Act would strengthen animal protections, but Saeed says it still “needs the president’s signature.” The last presidential order on animal welfare, restricting bear baiting, was passed over 20 years ago by President Pervez Musharraf.

“No one in the government listens; I have gotten old trying to make them understand how important this is,” Safwan Ahmad, vice chairman of the non-profit Pakistan Wildlife Foundation, told AFP.

IWMB wants to establish a permanent sanctuary at the site of the rehabilitation centre, but the local authority that owns the land intends to reopen the facility as a public zoo.

“There is one zoo in almost every city worldwide,” said Irfan Khan Niazi of the environmental department of the Capital Development Authority (CDA), adding, “Just because rules were not followed once does not mean it would happen again.”

Published in Dawn, April 27th, 2024

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