Guest guest Posted October 20, 2002 Report Share Posted October 20, 2002 http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0210170308oct17.story Zoo's creatures caged in misery By Michael A. Lev Tribune foreign correspondent Published October 17, 2002 KABUL, Afghanistan -- The Chinese government, over the objection of two American zoo organizations, has presented the dilapidated, bankrupt Kabul Zoo two prized bears. The bears paced unsettlingly the other day in a cramped, battered iron cage, taunted by young men who climbed the security barrier to stick their fingers inside the bars. Nearby, a group of teens threw pebbles at the monkeys. In the director's office, a zoo official showed off what he said passed for the veterinary clinic: a drawer in a rusty filing cabinet containing a bottle of antiseptic and a few other meager supplies. There is nothing in the drawer to treat Donatella, another zoo bear, who has had a horrifically disfiguring infection on her snout for at least eight months. In some ways, the crumbling, bullet-scarred Kabul Zoo is in more pathetic shape today than when it was being bombed by warlords during Afghanistan's civil war. Its crisis could easily be solved. There is $350,000 in American donations for the zoo that cannot be turned over because of political infighting, a lack of communication and incompetent management in the capital. `Innocent hostages' " The animals continue to be innocent hostages, " said John Walsh of the World Society for the Protection of Animals, or WSPA, who spent time at the zoo in February helping establish water and electricity supplies. He is furious that winter is coming and little has been done to help the animals. The situation is so confused that the overburdened zoo director, Sheeraqa Omar, seems unaware that he is caught in the middle of a bureaucratic drama. For months, Omar has been waiting anxiously for the $350,000 to arrive, oblivious to the fact that the North Carolina Zoo, which has accepted responsibility for dispersing the money, refuses to turn over the funds until it gets assurances the contribution won't be squandered. David Jones, the North Carolina Zoo director, said the political turf fight in Kabul has delayed by four or five months efforts to do even the minimal amount of work to make the animals more comfortable and prepare the zoo for winter. " What we cannot do is what the Afghans would like: to hand over the $350,000 and expect it is going to be used for the purposes the donors wish it to be used for, " he said. Jones and Omar said the Kabul Zoo and its money are being fought over by the Ministry of Higher Education, which oversaw the zoo, and the city government, which controls it now. The ministry is negotiating with the Cologne Zoo in Germany to create a rehabilitation plan, but city hall does not want to relinquish control. After enduring years of protecting the animals in a war zone, Kabul officials know the zoo is about to see better days, and they do not want to be left out. " Some of our staff were injured, killed, blinded, and still we ran the zoo, " said Abdullatif Shahnori, an animal feeder and Omar's right-hand man. " Now times are good. We suffered a lot. Keeping the zoo is our right. " Jones said the Mayhew Home for Animals, a London-based organization that gives the zoo $250 to $400 a week for animal feed, is trying to get a clarification from Kabul's government. As soon as they do, Jones can use some of the money to send teams from the London Zoo to start caring for the animals and make temporary repairs until the full rehabilitation plan gets under way. The London teams could arrive within a month, Jones said, but only if he gets the necessary assurances. " What I don't want is to send people out at vast expense, using up this money, and find we are not getting anywhere, " he said. " At the end of the day I couldn't frankly care a damn who runs the place. But what I need in order to use these funds well is a definite indication as to who in the Kabul government is actually going to be responsible. " Walsh, of the WSPA, which cares for zoo animals in crisis situations around the world, is upset that Jones has not rushed to send a representative to mediate the dispute. " He's a more patient man than I am; I've seen too much suffering, " said Walsh, who helped protect animals at the zoo in Kuwait during the 1991 Persian Gulf war. Wretched conditions What Jones and Walsh agree on is that the zoo is in wretched condition and made a terrible error in judgment accepting the gift from China, which also includes two lions and some pigs. The zoo is in no condition to house the animals. There is a spacious enclosure surrounded by a moat that could handle the bears, but Donatella has been placed there to prevent her from rubbing her injured snout against the cage bars. So the two new bears pace maddeningly in a tiny cage that no Western zoo would use for even one animal. Jones and Walsh are upset that Donatella continues to suffer. Several Western military veterinarians serving in Afghanistan have examined and treated her, but Jones said she apparently has a complex infection that would require intensive treatment. Both the North Carolina Zoo and WSPA campaigned publicly for the Kabul Zoo to not accept the donated animals, but they apparently were overruled by the Chinese zoo. Omar, the Kabul zookeeper, said he accepted the Chinese animals because he can care for them, but he turned down an offer from India of two elephants. Omar and Shahnori spend their days smoking cigarettes in the zookeeper's tiny, tattered office. A baby cobra slithers in a mayonnaise jar on the windowsill, and a baby porcupine sleeps in a cardboard box under a chair. 2002, Chicago Tribune Y! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your web site http://webhosting./ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.