China Daily

Tiger tourism expands despite raid on popular temple run by monks

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Thailand’s tiger tourism business is booming and the captive tiger population is growing fast, experts say, more than two months after Thai wildlife authoritie­s found scores of dead cubs while rescuing animals from the popular Tiger Temple.

Animal rights activists called on tourists to shun Thai animal attraction­s, which they say are cruel and should be shut down, after the Tiger Temple in Kanchanabu­ri province, west of Bangkok, closed in June.

Thai wildlife authoritie­s vowed to inspect other tiger attraction­s, and confiscate­d 24 tigers from two venues, but the scrutiny has been short-lived.

“On the ground, nothing has changed,” said Jan Schmidt-Burbach, a Bangkok-based wildlife adviser for the World Animal Protection NGO. “The Tiger Temple case has brought attention to the topic but is unfortunat­ely limited to the temple itself.”

A July report by World Animal Protection shows that the number of captive tigers in Thailand’s tiger entertainm­ent industry jumped 33 percent, from 623 tigers in 2010 to 830 tigers in 20152016. Eight new venues also opened during the period.

Thailand offers an array of wildlife tourist attraction­s, from tiger “selfies” to elephant rides and orangutan boxing.

Some venues practice “speed breeding” in order to produce tiger cubs for tourist photo-ops, said Schmidt-Burbach.

The practice involves taking newborn cubs away from their mothers so that the females are ready to breed again sooner.

Schmidt-Burbach also said the rapid growth in the tiger population was not being addressed by the Thai government.

Thai Department of National Parks deputy director-general Adisorn Noochdumro­ng said a “population management regulation” was implemente­d in July to curb commercial tiger breeding. It requires venues to separate male and female tigers and request permission before breeding takes place.

Schmidt-Burbach and Edwin Wiek, director and founder of Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand, said the new regulation was inadequate and called for a complete breeding ban.

“All these tiger entertainm­ent venues in Thailand should not breed tigers at all because they have zero conservati­on purpose,” SchmidtBur­bach said.

Wiek said high demand was fueling tiger tourism.

“People still want their tiger selfies,” he said.

In July, Bollywood actress Sushmita Sen visited a Thai tiger attraction, posting pictures on Instagram of the visit just days before World Animal Protection appealed to Indian tourists not to support what it described as “the cruel industry”.

Reuters contacted the Sriracha Tiger Zoo on the outskirts of the seaside city of Pattaya for informatio­n about its visitor numbers. The zoo said it was unlikely the request would be approved.

All these tiger entertainm­ent venues in Thailand should not breed tigers at all because they have zero conservati­on purpose.” Jan Schmidt-Burbach, wildlife adviser

 ?? CHAIWAT SUBPRASOM / REUTERS ?? Visitors feed milk to a tiger cub at the Sriracha Tiger Zoo, in Chonburi province, Thailand, in June.
CHAIWAT SUBPRASOM / REUTERS Visitors feed milk to a tiger cub at the Sriracha Tiger Zoo, in Chonburi province, Thailand, in June.

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