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Fw: Los Angeles Times: Chinese zoos: Burden of Beasts in China; Many captive animals face starvation, overwork, abuse and death. When private zoos fail, the results can be devastating; 12/27/02

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COLUMN ONE; Burden of Beasts in China; Many captive animals face starvation,

overwork, abuse and death. When private zoos fail, the results can be

devastating.

The Los Angeles Times; Los Angeles, Calif.; Dec 27, 2002; Ching-Ching Ni;

 

Abstract:

CHAINED FOR LIFE: A monkey at the Yulin Zoo wears a heavy metal chain around

its neck to keep it from trying to flee out of hunger.; PHOTOGRAPHER: Han Lu

For The Times; NOTHING LEFT: [Liang Feng] stands before an empty cage at his

zoo in Yulin, China. Desperate for visitors, the staff once staged the

feeding of farm animals to carnivores. When that wasn't enough to draw

visitors, the workers pitted a lion against a tiger.; PHOTOGRAPHER: Han Lu

For The Times; COMMODITIES: Black bears often are kept for their bile. Their

abdomens are cut open and tubes are inserted for " milking. " The intense pain

can cause them to bang their heads against the cage.; PHOTOGRAPHER: Han Lu

For The Times

Full Text:

(Copyright The Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times 2002. Allrights

reserved.)

 

The brown bear used to weigh as much as 900 pounds. He could easily chomp

down 40 pounds of meat a day. Not anymore.

 

Since business at the private Yulin Zoo soured a few years ago, the omnivore

is lucky to see any kind of food. Once a day, his keeper scrapes together

leftover lunches from a nearby children's martial arts school. When that's

not available, all the bear gets is porridge or cornmeal soup.

 

He has lost nearly half his body fat. He growls and pounces on any prospect

of food that the occasional visitor tosses into his damp concrete cage -- a

dry sunflower seed, a raw olive.

 

" We feed him whatever we can get, just like a pig, " said zoo manager Yang

Yisheng.

 

Much has been made of China's record on human rights. But less publicized is

the country's dismal performance on animal rights. As the communist nation

reaps the financial benefits of capitalist economic reforms, captive animals

have become victims of the mad dash to get rich quick.

 

From the proliferation of poorly managed private zoos to the horrors of

legal bear-bile " farming, " entrepreneurs have reduced precious wildlife to

disposable sources of cash. Without adequate animal welfare legislation and

more public awareness, it's likely more animals will be starved or worked to

death.

 

" The big problem in China is there are no general animal protection laws

like we have in the West, " said Victor Watkins, director of wildlife at the

London-based World Society for the Protection of Animals. " There seems to be

no regulation of the zoos, no real awareness and no concern for the welfare

of animals. "

 

That's not entirely true. China does have a law that forbids the poaching

and hunting of endangered species. But it has no legislation to prevent

cruelty and abuse against animals, including those that may be endangered.

 

Even if government officials want to help, they say their hands are tied.

 

" If you tell me animals are starving, I can't do anything about it, " said

Liu Song, an official responsible for zoos with the State Forestry

Administration in Beijing, which is charged with managing wildlife. " There

is no law that says we have to do anything about it. "

 

Under China's government-controlled economy, the state offered

cradle-to-grave welfare for captive wildlife, as it did for humans. There

were only a handful of large zoos around the country. The animals'

well-being was relatively easy to guarantee. But that was before the

anything-goes market reforms swept the country two decades ago.

 

Large national zoos in major cities such as Beijing and Shanghai still

command government funding and attention, but a growing number of private

zoos do not. According to the Chinese Zoo Assn., at least 200 animal parks

nationwide are cashing in on rising incomes and hearty appetites for family

entertainment.

 

Motivated more by profit than the protection and preservation of wildlife,

the safari parks and zoos are easy to open but difficult to monitor. Many

poach or smuggle in endangered species, often killing or injuring the beasts

in the process.

 

The park operators tend to underestimate the high cost of maintaining large

animals and overestimate visitor attendance. Most have little management

experience or veterinary training.

 

In addition, two agencies -- the Forestry Administration and the

Construction Ministry -- share responsibility related to animals and parks.

The overlap creates loopholes that make oversight difficult.

 

Unlike in the West, China lacks private foundations or nonprofit

organizations capable of lending a helping hand. Much like ailing

state-owned enterprises that spit out redundant workers, bankrupt zoos end

up forcing wild animals to fend for themselves or perish.

 

A few months ago, wolves from a financially strapped zoo in the coastal city

of Ningbo in eastern China escaped by chewing a hole in their rusted metal

fence. According to one zookeeper, the animals had been starving. The

wolves' small meat ration often was stolen by staff members to feed their

own families.

 

Within days, four wolves were caught, shot, poisoned or beaten to death. Zoo

officials said they couldn't afford tranquilizer guns needed to capture the

beasts.

 

In 2000, aquarium operators in the central Chinese city of Chengdu fell

behind on utility bills. The landlord shut off the power supply. At least 10

varieties of endangered marine species froze to death.

 

A private aquarium in Wenzhou on the eastern coast was in similar straits.

Operators couldn't afford central heating so they placed an exposed furnace

on the steps of the indoor pool. An alligator came too close and is still

recovering from burns on its tail.

 

" We made $150,000 in our first year, " said a manager, who gave only his

surname, Chen. " We were the pride of Wenzhou. But now we can't even afford

electricity. The government won't bail us out. "

 

Desperate zoo operators resort to sideshows and other gimmicks to keep the

audiences coming. The lively Chinese media frequently offer tales of exotic

animals, such as peacocks and tigers, forced to perform until they die from

exhaustion.

 

Even more miserable are the Asiatic black bears, who are captured for their

valuable internal fluids. As many as 7,000 of these endangered animals are

believed to be held in government-sanctioned " farms, " where they live most

of their lives in cages too small for them to stand up or turn around.

 

Workers, most of them lacking medical training, cut open the bears' abdomens

to insert tubes that allow the animals to be " milked " of bile twice a day.

The fluid is used in products ranging from health tonics to shampoo. The

process is so painful that bears often bang their heads against the tiny

cage.

 

" Chinese people tend to regard animals as a form of natural resource, not

living beings capable of feeling pain, " Zhang Li, acting director for China

of the Massachusetts-based International Fund for Animal Welfare, said from

his office in Beijing. " This is definitely bad for China's reputation. "

 

But Liang Feng didn't expect that his animals would suffer when he opened

the nation's first private zoo in 1994. The former private school

administrator said that he had planned to start a learning center in Yulin

but that the local government asked him to invest in a zoo instead to boost

tourism.

 

It was fine when business thrived. During its first Chinese New Year's Day,

the Yulin Zoo brought in as much as $18,000 in ticket sales, a fortune for

this small city in southern China's impoverished Guangxi province.

 

" We had about 30,000 visitors that day, " Liang recalled. " There was a

traffic jam on the road here, and we didn't have enough ticket stubs for all

the people that came. "

 

At the zoo's prime, Liang housed more than 1,000 exotic animals, including

monkeys, camels, birds and fish, even tigers, lions and an elephant. But

tourism in the area never took off. As the initial burst of visitors trailed

off, so did the cash flow.

 

" I thought the government would help us out, " Liang said. " I brought the

first zoo to our area. I was making history. "

 

Seeing no subsidy from the state, the zoo dropped the admission price by

40%. It didn't make much difference.

 

Desperate for visitors to the zoo, the staff began staging the feeding of

trembling farm animals to carnivores. " We threw in live cows, sheep, horses,

just to see how the tiger would react, " Liang said.

 

When that was not enough, they shoved the larger beasts together into one

arena.

 

" We shouldn't talk about this, but we were forced to make the tiger and the

lion fight, just so we could make money, " Liang said. " They were so

ferocious, we had to pry them apart with a log. "

 

Even that didn't improve attendance.

 

Facing the threat of mass starvation among the animals, he returned some of

them to the zoos from which they had been purchased. Many others embarked on

a Dickensian life of toiling and sweat.

 

A 16-year-old tiger landed in a traveling animal show. The animal was so

underfed and overworked by the new keepers that it was emaciated when it

died, Liang said. Its remains immediately disappeared.

 

Unfortunately for these beasts, they often are worth more dead than alive.

It is both illegal and difficult to hunt and sell wildlife. Only zoos can

trade animals, offering small symbolic amounts for the exchange. But animal

parts smuggled and sold on the black market can fetch high prices.

 

Since little accountability is required after an animal dies in captivity,

some zoos secretly welcome the demise of a beast from an endangered species.

 

A zoo in the southern boomtown of Shenzhen reportedly ran a thriving

underground business marinating dead tiger bones in its basement and selling

them to visitors as snacks.

 

In the West, zoos can be sued for animal cruelty, but in China it is

difficult to turn to the courts for legal remedy.

 

A controversial case this spring involved a college student who attacked

five bears at the Beijing Zoo with sulfuric acid. One animal was blinded,

and the others suffered severe burns. The attack prompted public outcries.

But university officials, who normally are willing to expel students for

such things as pregnancy, imposed a lesser form of punishment. Nor was it

possible to press criminal charges against the offender because no law had

been violated.

 

" Without new animal rights legislation we have very limited power to

protest, " said Mang Ping, an animal rights activist in Beijing.

 

A controversy erupted this fall when a Beijing safari park donated more than

a dozen animals to replenish the war-ravaged Kabul Zoo. International zoo

communities protested the move, arguing that the Afghan facility was in no

condition to care for the beasts.

 

" It shows their total ignorance, " said Watkins, of the World Society for the

Protection of Animals, referring to the Chinese action. " It's a disgrace. "

 

But as China's stature rises in the world and the country prepares to host

the 2008 Olympics and the 2010 World Exposition, advocates see an

opportunity to draw attention to the plight of the nation's animals.

 

" The Olympics is China's pride. I'm afraid bear-bile farming is its shame, "

said Jill Robinson, founder of Hong Kong-based Animals Asia Foundation,

which runs a bear rescue program in China.

 

But can the animals wait that long?

 

At the Yulin Zoo, the remaining four bears and three monkeys cling to life

with no improvement in sight. There's no money to hire a vet.

 

One of the starving bears tried to run away and was stuffed into an even

smaller cage. To prevent the monkeys from trying to flee, zookeepers hung

heavy metal chains around their necks.

 

During the zoo's decline, the staff watched a father bear clobber a newborn

cub to death. The mother bear's name is Lian, which means either lotus or

pity.

 

" She really is a pity now, " Liang said recently, trekking up the ruins of

his former empire, passing empty cages, overgrown weeds and a dry fish tank.

A giant sea turtle that cost Liang more than $1,200 had scraped its belly on

the bottom of the shallow pool and died of infection.

 

" It weighed more than 150 pounds. That's as big as a grown man, " Liang said.

" We stir-fried its liver. It filled three large plates. "

[illustration]

Caption: PHOTO: CHAINED FOR LIFE: A monkey at the Yulin Zoo wears a heavy

metal chain around its neck to keep it from trying to flee out of hunger.;

PHOTOGRAPHER: Han Lu For The Times; PHOTO: NOTHING LEFT: Liang Feng stands

before an empty cage at his zoo in Yulin, China. Desperate for visitors, the

staff once staged the feeding of farm animals to carnivores. When that

wasn't enough to draw visitors, the workers pitted a lion against a tiger.;

PHOTOGRAPHER: Han Lu For The Times; PHOTO: COMMODITIES: Black bears often

are kept for their bile. Their abdomens are cut open and tubes are inserted

for " milking. " The intense pain can cause them to bang their heads against

the cage.; PHOTOGRAPHER: Han Lu For The Times

 

 

Credit: Times Staff Writer

------

Sub Title: [HOME EDITION]

Start Page: A.1

ISSN: 04583035

Subject Terms: Zoos

Endangered & extinct species

Wildlife

Cruelty to animals

Geographic Names: China

Dateline: YULIN, China

 

 

 

 

--

Kim Bartlett, Publisher of ANIMAL PEOPLE Newspaper

Mailing address: P.O. Box 960, Clinton WA 98236 U.S.A.

Website: <www.animalpeoplenews.org>

 

 

MY CORRECT EMAIL ADDRESS IS: <ANPEOPLE

If mail you send to me is bounced, it may be because " mail " has been

automatically and incorrectly inserted in the " reply to " address.

inserted in the " reply to " address.

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