Is it true that okapi calves don't have a bowel movement for the first few weeks? If so, an intenstinal problem would have been very difficult to forsee. I am sure the care given to the infant could not be faulted at London, though. It is a shame that they will have to wait at least two years before another calf will be born.
I favoured the setup London had before, when Elila had her last two calves and they also held two males for a while, allowing them to hold 4 okapi at one point....when they were kept in what is now the current zebra area. They had 3 separate outdoor enclosures, and twice the indoor space they now occupy, and if they had remained here the scope to hold more than one adult female would have been obvious. But it would seem that zebras were a 'must have' for the Into Africa exhibit, I'm assuming because they thought they could successfully mix them with the giraffes to create a mixed 'paddock'. The zebras are quite pointless as an exhibit, and basically replaced the successful breeding group of Eastern bongo (when the okapi were moved into their enclosure).
I also remember a story coming out that at least one of the zebra had to be given some kind of anti-depressants on being moved into the exhibit...does anyone else remember reading this? - I have no idea whether or not this is true, but if they came from a large open paddock system to the sand yards of London zoo, I imagine they would have experienced at least some measurable reaction to the change. One of the zebras now appears to have either died or been moved out of the collection, leaving three.