The more I hear, like JamesB says, the worse it gets! I really hope that with BIAZA it is more than just a suspension. I saw that report on the web and it seems to be a case of if anyone asks say nothing!
Let's be honest, sometimes, in exceptional circumstances, animals die during birth or shortly after birth. It could be the mother or the young. It happens in captivity and it happens in the wild. As volunteers at Edinburgh Zoo we will often be told in updates if young have died or, as is sometimes the case, been killed by one of the parents. As we are told early on, it happens, that's nature. If you want animals to behave as naturally as possible in captivity you have to accept that. It happens in captivity, it happens in the wild. Only if the young animal is exceptionally important as part of a breeding programme will keepers step in otherwise you could end up with an unstble captive group on your hands which could lead to even more devastating consequences!
Most, if not all, modern zoos will, if asked, admit that deaths happen and the records they keep will be available for examination. Documentation relating to any animal is extensive and covers more detail than you might first imagine! A good zoo will always make itself open to scrutiny by anyone who wants to scrutinise.
What I saw in that report was a case of yes it happened but you didn't see it, right.
Life is harsh but trying to hide it from anyone doesn't help. In fact in my eyes, trying to hide something is basically an admission of guilt!
It needs BIAZA to boot them out completely and publicly say that NAZF is NOT the way good zoos operate! In fact having somewhere like NAZF as a member of any zoo association can sadly bring other zoos in to disrepute, purly by a public perception of being linked via a common body.