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UPDATE: Re Zoo Aniamls starving in Iraq

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" http://www.arabtimesonline.com/arabtimes/kuwait/Viewdet.asp?ID=157 & amp;cat=a " >h\

ttp://www.arabtimesonline.com/arabtimes/kuwait/Viewdet.asp?ID=157 & amp;cat=a</a>

 

19th Apr 2003 : Web Edition

 

Arab Times, Middle East

 

Kuwait helps keep 'Iraq zoo' alive, Food shipped for starving 'inmates'

 

KUWAIT CITY, April 18, (AP): As the war in Iraq winds down, attention is

turning to one group of forgotten victims: the animals at Baghdad's zoo.

Weakened before the war by lack of food and medicine blamed on years of UN

sanctions, the animals' lives were endangered during the conflict by the

placement of an Iraqi gun battery on the zoo's grounds, opening it to

destruction by US military attack.

 

The zookeepers fled, leaving the lions, bears, monkeys, camels and other

charges without food and water. Since Saddam Hussein's regime was toppled,

the zoo has been looted. US troops have been feeding some animals from their

rations. Moved by their plight, Kuwait shipped seven tons of frozen meat,

fruit, vegetables and feed by truck to Iraq on Friday in an effort to save

animals that haven't yet died or escaped from their cages to roam the

streets of Baghdad.

 

'This represents two to four weeks of food for the Baghdad zoo,' said Jim

Fikes, an Army reservist who put together the shipment with the Humanitarian

Organizing Committee in Kuwait City, which handles connections between

charities and the US military. 'It comes from a request that I got through

the military chain,' Fikes said. 'My understanding is that there's a serious

shortage of food. It was considered urgent.' When zookeepers fled, animals

were left inside cages with no food or water. Looters stole birds and

non-threatening mammals and opened the monkey cages, setting them free to

roam the city.

 

US forces in Baghdad have described coming across the forgotten animals -

including weakened lions stumbling throughout the compound. They fed some of

them crackers, noodles and meat from their ration packs. The troops

slaughtered pigs penned at the zoo site and butchered a dead wolf to feed

the lions and tigers. But it couldn't go far - a lion consumes 18 pounds a

day. Running water has not been restored to the zoo, and soldiers and Iraqis

have trucked it in to the animals. Consulting zookeepers in Kuwait about the

animals' dietary needs, Fikes and the Kuwaiti government rounded up sacks of

apples, carrots, potatoes, lettuce, grain, bales of hay and crates of

frozen, boneless meat for shipment to Baghdad.

 

A single truck, with a sign stating that the shipment was a gift from Kuwait

to the people of Iraq, left Kuwait City on Friday morning and was to pick up

a military convoy at the border for the daylong drive to the Iraqi capital.

A US military veterinarian will accompany it. Non-governmental organizations

are inquiring about helping, Fikes said, but Baghdad is not yet secure

enough for them. For now, the Kuwaiti shipment will be enough. Fikes

expressed hope that as Baghdad's markets reopen, fruit and vegetables can be

purchased within the city to keep the non-carnivores alive.

 

The creatures were vulnerable before the war. Sanctions imposed in 1991

after the Gulf War made specialized food and medicines difficult to import.

The worthless Iraqi currency meant entry fees could not cover operating

costs. Iraq's invasion of southern neighbor Kuwait triggered the war 12

years ago. Kuwait allowed US and British troops to stage their recent

invasion from its soil.

 

The Kuwaiti government has been at pains to let Iraqis know the war was not

against them, but against Saddam. Kuwait has been at the forefront of aid

shipments into Iraq, more willing to risk danger zones than many

international organizations. 'It's very important that this food gets up

there,' said Abdullah Al-Enezi, the Kuwaiti coordinator for the shipment.

'We see this as being for Iraqi kids. Zoos are mainly for kids. In a way, we

're helping them as much as the animals.' Several hundred exotic mammals and

birds in Baghdad may be in need of food, shelter and veterinary care, Sydney

J Butler, executive director of the American Zoo and Aquarium Association,

said Thursday in Maryland.

 

Butler said the zoo association would raise funds to help Baghdad's zoos,

with help from the North Carolina Zoo and the North Carolina Zoological

Society, as they did for the Kabul Zoo in Afghanistan. More than 300 animals

are missing - only the lions and tigers remain. The big cats, who were

obviously too fearsome for the robbers, have been left neglected and

starving in their enclosures. 'I am frightened to come here,' said the zoo's

vet Hashim Mohamed Hussein as gunfire crackled from across the park on

Thursday. 'But I have to see my animals. They are hungry but we have no

money to feed them.' Mandor, a 20-year-old Siberian tiger and the personal

property of Saddam Hussein's eldest son Uday, was slumped against the green

bars of his cage, his beautifully-marked coat hanging off his bones.

 

He looked up briefly as the vet approached, only to hang his head again when

he realized his keeper was empty-handed. Next door, Sudqa, a nine-year-old

lioness, got to her feet and let out a low moan. The remnants of her last

meal lay in the corner, a white bone chewed over and over. Hussein said in

all there were seven lions and two tigers, who each consume some five

kilograms of meat a day. 'Five kilograms of meat would cost me 80,000 dinars

($30),' said Hussein. 'And there are nine animals. I have nothing like this

kind of money.' Meanwhile, the North Carolina Zoo is heading efforts to aid

public and private zoos in Baghdad, just as it did for the Kabul Zoo when

fighting eased in Afghanistan.

 

The American Zoo and Aquarium Association said Thursday that its 212 members

are making plans to help zoos in the Iraqi capital. The North Carolina Zoo

in Asheboro and the North Carolina Zoological Society are coordinating the

effort, said Sydney J. Butler, executive director of the AZA, based in

Silver Spring, Maryland. 'Through our network of people in the region, we

can assist in getting funds, food and Veterinary items into Baghdad, 'said

David Jones, director of the North Carolina Zoo. 'It is imperative that we

have reliable mechanisms in place for supporting this effort. As urgent as

the need is for humanitarian aid, there is also the need to help animals

that have been suffering during these times.'

 

Distributed in accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. Section 107

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As harrowing as the war and this story have been, there seems to be some

relief in sight for the animals of Iraq and, God willing, the people of Iraq

too.

 

 

 

-

" Lynn " <averyl

<aapn >

Saturday, April 19, 2003 11:30 PM

UPDATE: Re Zoo Aniamls starving in Iraq

 

 

>

" http://www.arabtimesonline.com/arabtimes/kuwait/Viewdet.asp?ID=157 & amp;cat=

a " >http://www.arabtimesonline.com/arabtimes/kuwait/Viewdet.asp?ID=157 & amp;ca

t=a</a>

>

> 19th Apr 2003 : Web Edition

>

> Arab Times, Middle East

>

> Kuwait helps keep 'Iraq zoo' alive, Food shipped for starving 'inmates'

>

> KUWAIT CITY, April 18, (AP): As the war in Iraq winds down, attention is

> turning to one group of forgotten victims: the animals at Baghdad's zoo.

> Weakened before the war by lack of food and medicine blamed on years of UN

> sanctions, the animals' lives were endangered during the conflict by the

> placement of an Iraqi gun battery on the zoo's grounds, opening it to

> destruction by US military attack.

>

> The zookeepers fled, leaving the lions, bears, monkeys, camels and other

> charges without food and water. Since Saddam Hussein's regime was toppled,

> the zoo has been looted. US troops have been feeding some animals from

their

> rations. Moved by their plight, Kuwait shipped seven tons of frozen meat,

> fruit, vegetables and feed by truck to Iraq on Friday in an effort to save

> animals that haven't yet died or escaped from their cages to roam the

> streets of Baghdad.

>

> 'This represents two to four weeks of food for the Baghdad zoo,' said Jim

> Fikes, an Army reservist who put together the shipment with the

Humanitarian

> Organizing Committee in Kuwait City, which handles connections between

> charities and the US military. 'It comes from a request that I got through

> the military chain,' Fikes said. 'My understanding is that there's a

serious

> shortage of food. It was considered urgent.' When zookeepers fled, animals

> were left inside cages with no food or water. Looters stole birds and

> non-threatening mammals and opened the monkey cages, setting them free to

> roam the city.

>

> US forces in Baghdad have described coming across the forgotten animals -

> including weakened lions stumbling throughout the compound. They fed some

of

> them crackers, noodles and meat from their ration packs. The troops

> slaughtered pigs penned at the zoo site and butchered a dead wolf to feed

> the lions and tigers. But it couldn't go far - a lion consumes 18 pounds a

> day. Running water has not been restored to the zoo, and soldiers and

Iraqis

> have trucked it in to the animals. Consulting zookeepers in Kuwait about

the

> animals' dietary needs, Fikes and the Kuwaiti government rounded up sacks

of

> apples, carrots, potatoes, lettuce, grain, bales of hay and crates of

> frozen, boneless meat for shipment to Baghdad.

>

> A single truck, with a sign stating that the shipment was a gift from

Kuwait

> to the people of Iraq, left Kuwait City on Friday morning and was to pick

up

> a military convoy at the border for the daylong drive to the Iraqi

capital.

> A US military veterinarian will accompany it. Non-governmental

organizations

> are inquiring about helping, Fikes said, but Baghdad is not yet secure

> enough for them. For now, the Kuwaiti shipment will be enough. Fikes

> expressed hope that as Baghdad's markets reopen, fruit and vegetables can

be

> purchased within the city to keep the non-carnivores alive.

>

> The creatures were vulnerable before the war. Sanctions imposed in 1991

> after the Gulf War made specialized food and medicines difficult to

import.

> The worthless Iraqi currency meant entry fees could not cover operating

> costs. Iraq's invasion of southern neighbor Kuwait triggered the war 12

> years ago. Kuwait allowed US and British troops to stage their recent

> invasion from its soil.

>

> The Kuwaiti government has been at pains to let Iraqis know the war was

not

> against them, but against Saddam. Kuwait has been at the forefront of aid

> shipments into Iraq, more willing to risk danger zones than many

> international organizations. 'It's very important that this food gets up

> there,' said Abdullah Al-Enezi, the Kuwaiti coordinator for the shipment.

> 'We see this as being for Iraqi kids. Zoos are mainly for kids. In a way,

we

> 're helping them as much as the animals.' Several hundred exotic mammals

and

> birds in Baghdad may be in need of food, shelter and veterinary care,

Sydney

> J Butler, executive director of the American Zoo and Aquarium Association,

> said Thursday in Maryland.

>

> Butler said the zoo association would raise funds to help Baghdad's zoos,

> with help from the North Carolina Zoo and the North Carolina Zoological

> Society, as they did for the Kabul Zoo in Afghanistan. More than 300

animals

> are missing - only the lions and tigers remain. The big cats, who were

> obviously too fearsome for the robbers, have been left neglected and

> starving in their enclosures. 'I am frightened to come here,' said the

zoo's

> vet Hashim Mohamed Hussein as gunfire crackled from across the park on

> Thursday. 'But I have to see my animals. They are hungry but we have no

> money to feed them.' Mandor, a 20-year-old Siberian tiger and the personal

> property of Saddam Hussein's eldest son Uday, was slumped against the

green

> bars of his cage, his beautifully-marked coat hanging off his bones.

>

> He looked up briefly as the vet approached, only to hang his head again

when

> he realized his keeper was empty-handed. Next door, Sudqa, a nine-year-old

> lioness, got to her feet and let out a low moan. The remnants of her last

> meal lay in the corner, a white bone chewed over and over. Hussein said in

> all there were seven lions and two tigers, who each consume some five

> kilograms of meat a day. 'Five kilograms of meat would cost me 80,000

dinars

> ($30),' said Hussein. 'And there are nine animals. I have nothing like

this

> kind of money.' Meanwhile, the North Carolina Zoo is heading efforts to

aid

> public and private zoos in Baghdad, just as it did for the Kabul Zoo when

> fighting eased in Afghanistan.

>

> The American Zoo and Aquarium Association said Thursday that its 212

members

> are making plans to help zoos in the Iraqi capital. The North Carolina Zoo

> in Asheboro and the North Carolina Zoological Society are coordinating the

> effort, said Sydney J. Butler, executive director of the AZA, based in

> Silver Spring, Maryland. 'Through our network of people in the region, we

> can assist in getting funds, food and Veterinary items into Baghdad, 'said

> David Jones, director of the North Carolina Zoo. 'It is imperative that we

> have reliable mechanisms in place for supporting this effort. As urgent as

> the need is for humanitarian aid, there is also the need to help animals

> that have been suffering during these times.'

>

> Distributed in accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. Section 107

>

>

>

>

> For more information on Asian animal issues, please use the search feature

on the AAPN website: http://www.aapn.org/ or search the list archives at:

aapn

> Please feel free to send any relevant news or comments to the list at

aapn

>

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