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| A begging bear at
the Guwahati zoo. Courtesy: PETA |
Last week a news channel carried
a story done by PETA, India, volunteers on the zoos of eastern
India. It was shocking to say the least. Visitors in the
Shillong zoo were seen drinking and then assaulting animals.
One even gave a lit cigarette to a fox. No zoo-keeper was
around to stop them.
In the Guwahati zoo, a bear infested
with ticks was seen crying and begging for food from the
visitors. In the same zoo, a one-horned rhino has been living
alone in his enclosure for 36 years. He has developed a
wound above his horn from banging his head on the wall of
the enclosure in frustration.
Such is the deplorable state of
zoos not just in eastern India but throughout the country.
According to the reports by PETA volunteers, there is a
slaughterhouse on the premises of the Jodhpur zoo. In the
Veermata Jijabai Udyan zoo in Mumbai, a male elephant has
been chained for over six months without being released
even once to roam his enclosure.
Zoos claim that they exist for
education and conservation but what, pray, is to be learned
by watching tigers, monkeys and other intelligent animals
walk in endless circles in pitifully tiny cells?
A worldwide study of zoos conducted
by the Born Free Foundation revealed that zoochosis, a psychological
disease caused by stress is rampant in confined animals.
Zoo animals are known to display
zoochosis by engaging in abnormal behaviours such as head
bobbing, biting cage bars, pacing and severely mutilating
themselves. Many of these animals die prematurely as a result.
Such bizarre behaviour has nothing
to do with how animals live and behave naturally in the
wild. Torn from their families and often alone, many of
these sensitive animals are in a constant state of grief
and misery.
Zoo staff, zoo vets and other
relevant officials are often ill-trained and ignorant of
animal psychology and insensitive to the condition of the
very animals they are supposed to be caring for. The little
solace that the animals can hope for is also taken away
from them when unruly visitors torment them by pelting stones
and plastic bottles at them.
According to Anuradha Sawhney,
chief functionary, PETA, the Central Zoo Authority has de-recognised
some of the zoos, like the one in Bikaner. Therefore the
onus is on the state governments to take timely action and
ensure that these animals are relocated. Every day that
is postponed, it?s the animals that suffer.
In a country that prides itself
on being ahimsa vaadi, I believe we are on the borderline
of humanity. We need to figure out who the real beasts are:
them or us?
PS: Special thanks to PETA for
their extensive research in the zoos of India. |