Animals Australia Unleashed
Change the World Who Cares? Videos Take Action! The Animals Community Forum Shop Blog Display
1 2 3
Your E-Mail: O Password:
Login Help     |     Join for Free!     |     Hide This

Post a Reply

Good news from Iraq - Six rescued bears set free

in Kurdish Halgord National Park

1 - 2 of 2 posts


robert99 robert99 Sweden Posts: 1360
1 10 Apr 2017
http://www.rudaw.net/english/kurdistan/090420171
Six hand-raised Asiatic brown bears were set free on Monday in the wilds of Halgord National Park, a wildlife sanctuary north of the Kurdistan Region.


The bears had been working animals, forced to perform tricks like dancing and languished inside uncomfortable cages for much of their life, according to the Kurdish-American Organisation which secured their release.

The six bears had partly been trained for survival in the wild by the organisation before releasing them in the wild nature.

“They were being kept in very poor and inhumane conditions in different places across the Kurdistan Region. The owners made money by showing them to the public or simply making them dance,” said Bilind Birifkani, head of the Kurdish-American organisation, a joint venture that promotes friendly ties between Kurdistan and the US.

“We have now managed to bring these bears to where they really belong, but there are of course other wild animals elsewhere which we plan to set free,” he added.

The touching moment that four bears set foot outside their tiny cages after years inside nearly sent the bears mad. They began pacing and swaying in the tiny cages moments earlier, a sign that they were suffering from physical and mental deprivation, organisers said.

After their release, however the bears took tentative steps into their comfortable new enclosures, clean and complete with baths and greenery in the Halgord mountaintops covered with snow which the organisers said the bears had deeply longed for.

“The nature and environment here is really amazing. It’s a perfect place for wildlife, this is why we brought these animals here,” said Avin Halo, head of the American School in Erbil who also helped release the animals.

“Wild creatures belong here and not in cages,” she added.
ReplyQuote

robert99 robert99 Sweden Posts: 1360
2 11 Apr 2017
more good news
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/apr/11/mosul-zoos-last-survivors-simba-the-lion-lula-the-bear-safety

Simba the lion and Lula the bear, the last two residents of Mosul zoo, have been flown out of Iraq to receive emergency care from an animal welfare group.

A group of veterinarians from the Four Paws International charity took the animals out of war-battered Mosul and after many administrative delays finally managed to fly them to Jordan from the Iraqi Kurdish capital of Arbil.

“We’re in the plane with the animals, we’re leaving now,” said Amir Khalil, a 52-year-old Egyptian-Austrian vet who headed the Four Paws mission.

The doctor found the pair covered in dirt and excrement in February, abandoned in their cages at the privately owned zoo in the eastern half of Mosul.

Iraqi forces launched a massive operation to retake the city, Iraq’s second largest, from the Islamic State group in October and spent weeks battling the jihadists street by street before eventually retaking the east bank in January.

When Four Paws reached the zoo, nobody had entered the cages in weeks and no other animals apart from the female bear and the male lion had survived.

When Khalil and his team came back to the region in late March, they had one goal which was to remove the animals temporarily from Iraq so they could receive proper veterinary care.

“I’m a vet – I have to look after these animals,” said Khalil, a kind of “roving war zone veterinarian”.
ReplyQuote


www.unleashed.org.au