John Dineley:This is the official response from an spoken person at Amazing Animals to the “allegations” in various newspapers regarding the white lions.
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I am not quite sure what is implied by “allegation”. This seems to indicate that supplying trained captive-bred animals for a presentation to a semi-static show in Japan is illegal. It is not. So long as the Five Freedoms have been met in line with the Animal Welfare Act 2006, no one is breaking the law in regarding to the keeping of animals. This is more a question of aesthetics and the need to prompt an emotive story. Unlike most travelling shows, the Japanese show in question travels no more than four to five times per year.
We note that West Midlands Safari Park have been criticized for breaking a rule set down by BIAZA. I am not sure if this is the case. The rule is page five of their transaction policy under “ A. Breeding and Surplus (b)”. It states that BIAZA collections must not be sent to places that “would not normally be considered suitable outlets” and that they “MAY [our emphasis] include circuses, some research institutions, animal dealers, welfare organisations involved in inappropriate reintroductions”. I don’t like answering for West Midlands Safari Park, but they did know that the lions may be going to Japan.
We note that The Sun newspaper is the first publication to pick up this story. I think a few points need to be straightened out. Firstly that the only thing rare about the lions in question is their colour. White lions are not an endangered species or even a species of lion. They have a recessive colour gene. They are actually African lions, which ARE NOT Appendix I endangered species. Most zoos do not keep them anyway. These particular lions are multi-generation captive bred. Secondly, The Sun newspaper should be very aware of our high animal welfare standards. They and their news group have booked us on numerous occasions. In fact, two years ago one of their journalists even tried to book one of our zebras to be photographed outside a venue in the snow. We refused them on animal welfare grounds.
I fear this is an animal rights inspired campaign used to generate funds for organizations that are not answerable to the charity commission, but instead have very radical agendas. CAPS, for example, are not only opposed to circuses but zoos as well. They are even seeking to ban the Trafford Centre Aquarium. Animal rights has a very different agenda to animal welfare, and I am greatly concerned that mainstream media provide the former with this type of platform.
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Via FaceBook Zoo News Digest.