Ripped away from her mother’s loving reach! #SayNoToElephantSlavery #HelpAwakenSleepingHearts

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Ripped away from her mother’s loving reach…..

Beaten. Starved. Stabbed. Deprived of all basic needs. Baby’s spirit completely broken. She is just about 2 years old Now she’s ready so we can take our selfie, so she can be taught to paint, so we can now ride on her back. So she can do all the circus tricks. This is what she gets for being born a majestic being… Do you think she deserves this so we can have our few minutes of fun?

All baby elephants forced into slavery go through this no EXCEPTION !This is all fueled by the tourist industry. What a terrible tragedy that we have allowed this to be. We need to come together to help end their slavery. Please help raise awareness and educate others about the abuse and cruelty elephants endure to entertain us.
Thank you!
#SayNoToElephantSlavery
#HelpAwakenSleepingHearts

Post by Diana Munoz

 

Team Kaavan’s #RumbleForRights for Elephants

Currently in Pakistan there is an elephant named Kaavan. For the past three decades, since he was a baby of between one and two years old, he has been held in conditions not fitting for any being. Considered property, he was a diplomatic gift from the Sri Lankan government to the Pakistan government in 1985.  Many people are aware of Kaavan and his story of being tightly chained almost his entire life in deplorable conditions in the Islamabad Zoo.

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Thanks to the hard work of many people around the world, there has been a tremendous amount of activity to get his story into the public spotlight. It is in large part because of social media pressure alerting Pakistani senators, and no less than the Chair of the Senate of Pakistan, to Kaavan’s plight and forcing the local government in Islamabad, which owns Kaavan and manages the zoo, to address some of the conditions in which Kaavan lives.

Part of the misinformation that the zoo presented was that Kaavan had to be chained because he was dangerous. Now, thanks to public pressure, Kaavan is left unchained for longer periods of time, and he has proved them wrong—he is not dangerous.

The zoo owners, managers, and handlers/mahouts have been running this zoo for years with horrific standards of care. The Islamabad Zoo is well known for its consistently bad conditions; its disregard and abuse of numerous animals who are exposed to solitary confinement; extreme heat and extreme cold in inadequate shelter; nutritionally poor diets; punishment; and, in too many cases, avoidable illnesses and death. The animals are viewed as no more than disposable commodities.

Let’s go back to when Kaavan once had a companion elephant named Saheli. She was brought to the zoo in 1991, and after being sufficiently broken in, she was put to work giving rides and having pictures taken by paying customers. When she wasn’t working, she was chained alongside Kaavan. Saheli developed wounds on her legs probably due to chains cutting into her skin. In spite of zoo visitors noticing that Saheli had begun to limp and alerting the management, the zoo administration ignored the gravity of her condition. Finally on April 29, 2012, she collapsed. The zoo veterinarian, who is unqualified in elephant management and medical care, could do nothing for her. Clearly by this time it was too late, and Saheli died on May 1, 2012. Kaavan was chained beside her during her illness and collapse, and as she was hoisted out of the zoo by crane, reports say that he was highly disturbed.

Elephants like the NhRP’s clients Beulah, Karen, Minnie, and the elephant we have been fighting for in Pakistan, Kaavan, are captured from the wild and from their families. Herd members are very often killed in the process of trying to protect the babies. Traumatized babies are shipped from their native habitat to be physically abused and mentally “broken” until they submit to a life as a docile “attraction” of one sort or another in zoos or circuses, giving tourist rides, kept as status symbols, or owned or rented for religious and cultural festivals. All this is even worse when we consider that elephants are scientifically proven to be one of the most intelligent species on earth; they are highly social and form lifelong bonds, are known to show empathy, are body-aware, and many would argue, self-aware.

In 2016, specialists went to the Islamabad Zoo to assess Kaavan and reported that he exhibits ‘severe’ behaviors indicative of stress. No wonder, when his life has been so unnatural, and he has been forced to live much of it chained and unable to take even a step because the chains are so tight. He has suffered interminable years of violent physical abuse to control and train him, and, also like Beulah, Karen, and Minnie, this intelligent being is forced to live day-to-day with so little if any autonomy. His owners are permitted to keep him without attending to even his most basic medical and dietary needs. The recommendations of the specialists—that Kaavan needs veterinary supervision and treatment—have been ignored. There are many photographs and videos of Kaavan chained, obsessively rocking his head and torso, and being financially exploited by his handler.

One year ago, the Cambodia Wildlife Sanctuary kindly offered to give a home to Kaavan where he could live autonomously, over time shed his habitualised behaviours, receive appropriate expert medical care, and socialize if he chose to. We are still campaigning for this outcome, which would be at no cost to his owners. It is too late to release him in to the wild because humans have robbed him of the survival skills that he would have learned over the course of his life, but nothing less than an expertly managed sanctuary environment is appropriate for these captive sentient beings.

Arguments against captivity, born out of scientific evidence that even the best of zoos cannot provide sufficiently for elephants, are gaining traction, but we know that the majority of captive elephants worldwide are still held in grossly and systemically inadequate facilities which continually cause premature deaths, diseases, and long-term mental and physical suffering. That is why we need to recognize elephants’ nonhuman legal personhood and fundamental rights. As we continue to learn about elephants, we are increasingly aware that no standard captive environment can replicate an elephant’s complex needs and highly social lives; this includes males like Kaavan who are as social as female elephants—contrary to old beliefs and the continuing mantra of those who hold male elephants in isolated captivity. If we have to destroy the innate characteristics of a nonhuman animal in order to keep him captive, what is the point? As a human species we have failed miserably in this regard because legally and culturally we still view all animals as property.

In Pakistan there are no laws protecting wild animals’ captive in zoos. This litigation of the Nonhuman Rights Project is of great importance to all in recognizing that we need to move forward and protect this extraordinary species, and we believe that this can only be done appropriately through acknowledging that they should have certain rights.

In the introduction to Marjorie Spiegel’s book The Dreaded Comparison: Human and Animal Slavery (1988), Alice Walker writes that animals were no more created for humans than black people for white or women for men. We believe that elephants were not created for humans: they have their own right to exist in this world as they are naturally born to be, and as humans, we should enable them to do that.

Anika Sleem is an animal rights advocate and co-founder of Team Kaavan, working to secure Kaavan’s release from the Islamabad Zoo to the Cambodia Wildlife Sanctuary. She’s very involved on social media platforms raising awareness for animals. Anika lives in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and volunteers much time advocating for animals, including holding a protest for Kaavan in the heart of downtown Toronto. She’s also involved in many fundraising campaigns for animal rescues.

Team Kaavan are animal rights advocates working together to release Kaavan to the Cambodia Wildlife Sanctuary . To help, you can join Kaavan’s page on Facebook, sign this petition, and follow us on Twitter: @AnimalWelfareWW@dianacmb4, @CareyOstrer,  and @anikasleem.

Article by nonhumanrights.org

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“Call To Action” Email your embassy & cc the embassy in Islamabad #FreeKaavan

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If you would like to contact your embassy and cc. the embassy in Islamabad
Copy & Past #FreeKaavan

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List of Sri Lankan overseas Embassies and Consulates https://embassy.goabroad.com/embassies-of/sri-lanka

Email address for  Embassy in Islamabad srilanka@dsl.net.pk

 Dear Ambassador

We understand that Sri Lanka has been approached through its Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan to supply 1 or 2 juvenile elephants for Islamabad (formerly Marghazar) Zoo, one of which is to be a mate for Kaavan the 37 year old Asian male.  Also that you have been requested to send a veterinarian to Islamabad zoo to do a medical check on Kaavan.

We don’t know if you are aware of the very serious reputation that Islamabad zoo has and I would be grateful if you would take this in to consideration.

In relation to the care of the elephants, Kaavan and the female elephant named Saheli who died aged just 22 in 2012, there has been a great deal of  media coverage detailing the abuse and neglect of both elephants.  This media coverage is in Pakistani national media and media internationally including in the media in Sri Lanka.

Sending new elephants there would be a disaster, the zoo has made little or no investment in either staff training or in the elephant enclosure in the 32 years since Sri Lanka donated the elephant to Pakistan in 1985.  The result of this is that Kaavan has for many years exhibited stereotypic behaviour, has dangerously unhealthy feet and the death of the previous female elephant.   A leg wound  believed to have been caused by the chains attached to her legs became infected.  Several times the leg wound was reported to zoo authorities by concerned zoo visitors as she began to limp. It was either never treated correctly, or it was ignored,  either way the end result was that she collapsed and eventually died from an easily treatable wound.

The male elephant Kaavan who was already exhibiting stereotypic behaviours showed very clear signs of being traumatized by her death, and the Zoo authorities and Mahouts responded by chaining him in the dilapidated  shed by all 4 legs for 9 months.  The reason they gave for this was that he was a dangerous elephant.

It is very well documented on film and in the media and the international NGO Four Paws International who observed him at the zoo in December 2016 reported that he had severe stereotypic behaviour.  They also recommended that a fence be built to allow medical attention in protected contact, and that security fencing between the elephant and the general public needed improvement.  Neither of these recommendations has been carried out, nor their offer to send their own staff to train the zoo staff.

The international community became involved in his case in 2015 due to a campaign on social media including a petition signed by 405,000 people around the world that they eventually unchained this elephant, and dismissed his previous Mahouts.  His new Mahouts do, I am sure try their best and are kinder to him, but they are highly constrained by the zoo authorities and the local Government in Islamabad.   It is a miracle that he has survived in conditions that are highly inadequate, detrimental to his health, and having had completely inadequate medical care.  The zoos in Pakistan are not regulated by any laws pertaining to the health and welfare for captive animals and are not members of any international zoo authority.

There have been and continue to be multiple deaths of animals in Islamabad zoo, as well as at the other zoos, and the wildlife parks in Pakistan, documented and in the public domain.

I humbly request, and am sure that you will be sympathetic to the fact that sending a juvenile female in to Kaavans enclosure could be very dangerous for the female due to the completely inadequate facilities  the zoo has.  It would also have negative repercussions on Sri Lanka’s reputation.

I also understand that currently Sri Lanka is not exporting elephants to international zoos while the Nandi case is still in the courts

I would be very grateful if you would get back to me at your earliest convenience.

With kind regards,

 Name /country or state and country

 

Hands Off Our Wildlife

We at Animal Welfare Worldwide condemn trophy hunting. Auctioning off a life to the highest bidder and calling it a game or sport is just reckless, inhumane, and declining our wildlife.
Trophy Hunters are hurting us all, these unsuspecting animals are gunned down by simply making a wrong turn their lives stolen to represent the success of the hunt
Trophy hunting should also be linked to poaching however the only difference here is poaching is unauthorized and trophy hunting is considered entertainment the fact is poaching and trophy hunting are killing hundreds and millions of wildlife which a huge setback to wildlife conservation.
& watch the powerful message in this video clip:  (Author Unknown)

Please sign petition

Petition : Kaavan has Secured a Sanctuary at No cost to Pakistan at Cambodia Wildlife Sanctuary

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https://www.change.org/p/prime-minister-muhammad-nawaz-sharif-kaavan-has-secured-sanctuary-at-no-cost-to-pakistan-at-cambodia-wildlife-sanctuary?recruiter=54716399&utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=copylink&utm_campaign=share_petition

Thank YOU for signing and sharing !
#FreeKaavan

 

When the night comes … #FreeKaavan

When the night comes .. and everybody sleep , I’m awake , thinking of our Boy Kaavan … how are you spending those nights ? Alone, Scared , Chained in the dark , so lonely … I wish I could come to you , to comfort you , and say to you, keep the fait , dear sweet Kaavan I’m not going away ! , I stay with you as long as needed “until”, we are bringing you to your new Home, where there’s love and company, and even maby a new girlfriend, and who knows … a baby Kaavan !! These are my thoughts , and I hope you feel me … your our baby boy Kaavan , I love you , I never let go , it’s not a dream…it can be your reality… 


LOVE ♥ Kaavan 
https://www.facebook.com/AnimalWelfareWorldwide

https://www.facebook.com/teamkaavan/