Archive for October, 2009

BOLIVIA’S FREED CIRCUS ANIMALS

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Bolivia’s Freed Circus Animals Need Homes

By JEAN FRIEDMAN-RUDOVSKY / LA PAZ Tuesday, Oct. 27, 2009

An undercover investigation of circuses across South America by Animal Defenders International revealed abuse in circuses in Bolivia

Animal Defenders International

“Lions hate circuses” has long been a bumper-sticker slogan of the animal-rights movement, and Bolivia has heard the message: the left-leaning government of the Andean country recently passed the world’s first legislation prohibiting the use of all animals in circuses. That’s a huge victory for the London-based organization Animal Defenders International (ADI), which agitated for the ban. But it has left the group and others like it facing the challenge of finding homes for 22 lions and a few primates, which will be euthanized if none are available.

ADI staff spent two years undercover working inside Bolivia’s circuses documenting animal abuse, which included forcing pregnant lions to jump through fire and keeping brown bears in 6-by-9-ft. cages. A handful of countries, including Israel and Costa Rica, prohibit the use of wild animals as performers, but Bolivia is the first to extend the ban to all animals, including domestic species like dogs, horses and llamas. “We are extremely proud,” says Bolivian Congresswoman Ximena Flores, the law’s main proponent.

(Read a Q&A about the illegal trade in wildlife.)

World-renowned primatologist Dr. Jane Goodall is impressed by the legislation but sees it as only a first step. “What do you do with all those animals?” she asked TIME on a visit to La Paz earlier this month. “That is the nightmare.”

(See the top 10 animal stories of 2008.)

The new law gives circuses until June 2010 to hand over their animals. Llamas, ponies and dogs, the most common performers here, can be easily reintegrated into comfortable habitats. And the country’s performing tigers and bears have already been taken to neighboring countries by the owners of larger circuses to avoid confiscation. But small, family-owned circuses are unlikely to flee the country, which will leave two dozen lions and primates needing new homes.

For the ban’s supporters, who have worked with the government on developing the legislation, not just any place will do. Zoos, for example, are ruled out by those involved in the discussion, some of whom say they’d rather euthanize the animals than see them back behind bars. After spending a lifetime in small boxes, constantly moving from hot to frigid climates and living at the whim of humans, these animals “shouldn’t have to be entertainment for anyone,” says ADI CEO Jan Creamer.

Goodall says the ideal habitats are animal sanctuaries — nature reserves that take in abandoned, orphaned or freed animals that cannot be reintroduced into the wild. And she’s impressed by the love and care they’re given at the two sanctuaries operated by Bolivian nonprofit Inti Wara Yassi, where hundreds of monkeys and birds and more than two dozen pumas, jaguars and ocelots live in large cages set in lush jungle. They are played with or taken out for walks every day. “Before [this reserve was created] these animals were as good as dead. Now they have the option for a life with dignity,” says Inti Wara Yassi founder and president Juan Carlos Antezana.

But the Bolivian government — and many parents across the globe — is worried that instead of being looked after by professional caretakers, Inti Wara Yassi’s animals are cared for by young backpackers, mainly from the U.S. and Europe, who have no prior experience or training. The reserves have become a hot spot on the South American backpacking circuit, offering any animal lover the prospect of being put in charge of a 200-lb. jaguar (including taking it for daily walks on a leash) within 72 hours of arrival. Goodall says it would have been her dream to work there when she was young, but she has some reservations about the youngsters’ preparation and safety. There are no medical professionals on-site (other than a veterinarian), no cell-phone reception, no landline, no radio and no vehicle in case of emergency. Antezana says there have never been any serious injuries, though YouTube abounds with some pretty scary encounters between animals and volunteers.

Antezana acknowledges the risks but says his volunteers know what they are getting into and that by treating the animals well, they avoid problems. “[The volunteers] come down aware of the work and the love that one has to have with the animal,” he says. “If one comes passively, with love, the animals are in peace. This is the No. 1 basis for this work. Everything carries a risk, but thanks to the fact that we do it with love, that produces positive energy.”

It’s unclear how many of Bolivia’s circus animals will end up at one of these nature reserves. Officials want to avoid the reserves’ being expanded as a result of the circus-animal ban. Even Goodall admits that Antezana shouldn’t take on more animals because the reserves are maxed out.

Bolivia’s first freed lions — five surrendered by a cooperative circus — are heading to California. “It’s going to be like heaven for these animals,” says an excited Pat Derby, founder and president of PAWS (the Performing Animal Welfare Society), which will receive the five lions early next year. PAWS currently offers sanctuary, with minimal human contact, for dozens of former performing bears, tigers, elephants and lions in large, fenced-in natural habitats on 2,000-acre reserves. “We provide a space where animals can run and play and rest as they choose,” says Derby. “Our goal is for [life at the sanctuary] to be as close as possible to their life in the wild,” she tells TIME.

PAWS may not be able to accommodate all of Bolivia’s big cats, but Derby and Creamer have pledged to help find homes for them in some of the many comparable facilities around the world. ADI is covering transport costs for the five heading to PAWS, and its promise of continued financial assistance comes as a relief for the Bolivian government. “We simply don’t have the resources to cover relocation,” says David Kopp of Bolivia’s Vice Ministry for Biodiversity.

Despite the challenges of implementing the law, animal-rights advocates want Bolivia to serve as an example for the rest of the world. “Conditions in Bolivia were certainly horrific,” says Creamer, adding that caretakers often punched and kicked disobedient animals. But, she says, this extreme abuse isn’t the point. ADI has run campaigns to end circus suffering in the U.S. and Europe too, because even the best circuses in the world can’t provide the conditions necessary for an animal’s happiness. Says Creamer: “It’s like if I asked you to live in your bathroom for the rest of your life.”

Opinion: How can Council speaker downplay abuse of circus animals?

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

Your Opinion letters »

How can Council speaker downplay abuse of circus animals?

By Letters to the Editor/Staten Island Adva…

October 13, 2009, 1:38PM

By ADELAIDE M. LAURIE, NEW DORP

I am writing to urge City Council Speaker Christine Quinn to meet with Dr. John Hynes and the members of the Richmond County Humane Voters of New York concerning Intro 389.

This is something that must be addressed and corrected. The lack of compassion for animals used in circuses is just incomprehensible! What I find equally disturbing is the lack of concern for this issue that Ms. Quinn has shown.

How she could possibly think that the mistreatment of these animals “wasn’t that bad” is a very telling statement. That comment is just too ridiculous.

How much worse should the abuse of the circus elephants be before she will acknowledge that they are being abused?

I find Ms. Quinn’s comments to be very disingenuous and disturbing. I hope that she will reconsider her position on this and that she can one day attend a circus event that does not include elephants or any other animal that would suffer by being used as entertainment.

This is certainly not what God created these wonderful creatures for.

NYC COUNCIL NEEDS TO LEARN ABOUT TREATMENT OF CIRCUS ANIMALS

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Speaker Quinn has a lot to learn about treatment of circus animals

By Letters to the Editor/Staten Island Adva…

October 13, 2009, 1:41PM

MICHAEL RUISI, LAS VEGAS

The following letter was sent to Ms. Meghan Linehan, Special Assistant to City Council Speaker Christine Quinn:

I was a resident of Staten Island for most of my life, and now live in Las Vegas. I still keep current on events of my hometown through the Advance.

I recently came across a letter by Dr. John Hynes, a veterinarian, and his meeting with City Council Speaker Christine Quinn concerning the treatment of circus animals.

My stomach turned when I read her comments that the abuse “wasn’t that bad” and that “it would have been worse.”

I believe the speaker is not quite as informed as she could be. I wonder how she would perceive the same circumstances if, instead of an elephant, it was a child, a senior citizen in a nursing home, or a household pet.

I call her attention to the tragedy involving the tiger attack which ended the Siegfried & Roy show. For decades, they trained with wild animals until one day, the natural instinct of the animal took over. Is she going to change her mind when a tragedy like this happens in New York City?

I would encourage Ms. Quinn to become more enlightened on the treatment of wild animals and attend the meeting proposed by Dr. Hynes concerning Intro 389.

[The writer is a former Grasmere resident.]

CITY COUNCIL OUGHT TO APPROVE HUMANE LEGISLATION

Thursday, October 8th, 2009
Your Opinion letters »

City Council ought to approve humane animal legislation

By Letters to the Editor/Staten Island Adva…

September 28, 2009, 11:29AM

JOHN G. HYNES, NEW PROVIDENCE, N.J.
   
    On Sept. 13, I met with City Council Speaker Christine Quinn. I asked why she had virtually blocked all of the humane animal legislation in the Council, specifically Intro 389 which would ban wild animal performances in New York City. (Council member Vincent Ignizio is a co-sponsor.) 

    I went into detail about the abuses suffered by circus animals, and reminded her that Ringling was currently awaiting a federal judge’s decision for multiple violations of the Endangered Species Act and abuse of their Asian elephants

    Borough president candidate John Luisi and City Council candidate Janine Materna joined me at a Cole Bros. Circus demonstration on Staten Island a few months ago, and saw the deplorable conditions for themselves. 

    Ms. Quinn acknowledged that although circus animals may be mistreated, she couldn’t imagine a circus without elephants. 

    I explained that suffering in the name of entertainment is not something that should be tolerated, and tradition should be no excuse for inhumane treatment. 

    She disagreed, and said that recent PETA undercover videos of Ringling Bros. elephants being abused by their handlers “weren’t that bad.” She said she “thought the abuse would be worse.” 

    Please e-mail Speaker Quinn’s assistant, and ask her to meet with us re: Intro 389. Ms. Linehan (mlinehan@council.nyc.gov). 
 
  [The writer is the Richmond County representative for the league of Humane Voters of New York and a member of the Humane Society Veterinary Medical Association. He is a veterinarian who practices at The Clinic at Country Estate in Richmond Valley and South Shore Veterinary Practice in New Dorp.]