Even though I work to improve my country's image internationally as much as I can, I firmly believe Islamabad zoo, and any other zoo in Pakistan that isn't run directly by a province's wildlife department for that matter, should be shut down. Islamabad zoo was never meant to house anything bigger than wolves and on top of that it has untrained staff. A major problem in Pakistan is that bureaucrats have a lot of influence and it is often because of this why establishments like Islamabad zoo are in the state that they are in, furthermore most zoo staff come from a forestry and agricultural background and have very basic if any knowledge at all when it comes to handling animals. Personally I don't think there is a need for a zoo in Islamabad anyways as Margalla NP, located just behind the zoo, can provide much better recreational and educational facilities to the public, which is severely in need of the latter. If anyone has any questions related to zoos in Pakistan feel free to contact me
Strongly believe Marghozar zoo should be shut down. People in charge run it like a business and obviously have no regard for animal welfare. I've seen limping muntjacs, stress pacing wolves, a completely healthy bear lose it's sanity in an enclosure not big enough for even smaller carnivore species and everything in between in this place. And the worst part is they deny everything, saying they're doing the "best they can". I remember they started a volunteer helper group a while back but refused to do anything that they advised and shut it down. And this isn't even limited to just the zoo, CDA also operates a roadside enclosure along one of Islamabad's major roads housing a herd of blackbuck. A wolf broke into this enclosure and killed at least 5 antelopes. Worst part is there's barely any awareness regarding this in the lower-middle class, which makes up the majority of zoo visitors (or a general idea of animal welfare for that regard). Hopefully the new zoo being constructed outside Islamabad proves to be better but unless it's operated directly by a wildlife department and the enclosures not designed by engineering firms that specialize in industrial infrastructure there's hardly a chance for these animals getting a better life.Sad ( bad ) news from the zoo:
Dozens Of Animals, Birds Die In Islamabad Zoo Due To Negligence Of Officials - UrduPoint
Seems like a Pyrrhic victory to me! This addressed only the plight of one individual and high profile animal and not in the least begins to achieve any real change on the ground to create a better zoo.Kaavan the Asian elephant will be freed!!!
He has been alone since his mate died in 2012, and thanks to a petition made some years ago by Cher, he will be sent to a sanctuary in Sri Lanka.
Cher sheds tears of joy as Pakistan's loneliest elephant wins freedom
To interpret the journal piece correctly one would have to have an annual report on acquisitions, transfers, births and deaths. Where this becomes of conservation interest I have highlighted the "changes": Between the first report (Islamabad Metropolitan Corporation) in July 2019 and the handover to the Islamabad Wildlife Management Board in May 2020 the numbers changedA lot of animals went 'missing'. ( among them a lot of common pigeons.... -seem to taste good) :
Around 500 animals go ‘missing’ from Islamabad zoo | The Express Tribune
Cannot say I am happy that a pair of Indian wolves will be shipped ex situ long distance to a zoo across a great zoogeographical divide and a different species of wolf in the country. Another reservation is about the quality of the facility where it is being sent to in Jordan.More animals will be moved to other places like the Wolves which will move to Jordan :
Wolves at Islamabad zoo to be flown abroad | SAMAA
last I checked the wolves were sent to another facility not too far from Islamabad and were to remain there.More animals will be moved to other places like the Wolves which will move to Jordan :
Wolves at Islamabad zoo to be flown abroad | SAMAA
Sorry, we misunderstood the post. It just infuriates me that some media make the wildest claims on developments that never will be. This is a phenomenon more frequent in the Deccan Shield Subcontinent where there is a cultured bureaucracy and top down decision-making process often announce events that may or may not happen in the future.last I checked the wolves were sent to another facility not too far from Islamabad and were to remain there.
It got so melodramatic ..., that President Imran Khan thanked Cher for helping the elephant be transferred. Now, IK is quite the wealthy man ..., what unnerves me is that Pakistani authorities have failed their zoos, failed their wildlife department where there has been no need to do so. By taking the elephant and a few other animals of the (former) Islamabad Zoo, the Municipality and Central Govt. have been saved an embarrassment or 20.
Seems like a Pyrrhic victory to me! This addressed only the plight of one individual and high profile animal and not in the least begins to achieve any real change on the ground to create a better zoo.
How on Earth did it come to this: a judge orders a zoo (Pakistan) to find a place in a sanctuary in consultation with a foreign government (Sri Lanka) within a month? I would like to see that verdict by the judge and its stipulations first. No offence, but it is a public secret that management of zoos in the Subcontinent is strewn in mind boggling bureaucracy and consequent inertia and lacklustre municipal or State/Govt. engagement.
BTW: is Messrs. Cher & Co. going to provide any financial support and/or in-kind for a transfer and support care at any "new" location? If not, that is the second downer and no-brainer on the entire episode.
What surprises me the most is that this overlooks the urgency of setting baseline criteria for changing the set up of the facility into a added value conservation breeding zoo with capable and committed management and trained keeper husbandry staff while also addressing the (lack of) policy directives and financial support from the Municipality for proper upkeep, trained staff and management of the zoo.
Himalayan brown bears are an endangered species. To transfer them out to a sanctuary in Jordan with even less specialised husbandry experience and out of range - as the region used to have - now extinct - Syrian brown bears is hardly a good transfer location for these bears.I agree with most of what you say, just to inform further, there was a 5 year public campaign which initially set out to improve conditions at the zoo. When this proved unlikely because of endless local government procrastination the campaign became one that urged relocation of Kaavan the elephant, not to another zoo but in a wildlife sanctuary in Cambodia who offered a place for Kaavan. When the Justice first stated a return to Sri Lanka, his thinking was that the elephant was gifted from Sri Lanka. You can hear why Justice Minallah came to his final judgement here from Lawyer Owais Awanand the Attorney Owais Awan in conversation with the Nonhuman Rights Project In the end 2 Himalayan brown bears were also relocated to a sanctuary in Jordan. There are ongoing actions by Pakistan’s public to either close down bad zoos or improve them, the case of Kaavan and the 2 bears set legal precedent which it is hoped will begin the actions to seriously improve the lives of captive wild animals. There is another public campaign to fundmentally improve conditions for animals at Karachi Zoo where a 17 year old African female elephant died in April 2023 after horrific illness all widely reported on social media. Her independent necropsy paid for by Four Paws International showed multiple reasons for her death. There is no intention in Pakistan’s zoos as far as I can see, to breed animals endangered in the wild for release back to their native habitats