New Straits Times

BEARS DYING OFF AS BILE PRICES DROP

Moon bears kept in cruel conditions for years may be killed for gall bladder as farmers can’t afford to keep them alive

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TWO moon bears are gently removed from the cramped cages where they have been held for 13 years, rescuers carefully checking their rotten teeth and matted paws before sending them to their new home in a grassy sanctuary in northern Vietnam.

The animals are among the lucky few to be rescued in a country where hundreds of bears are feared to have been killed or starved to death as the cost of once-valuable farmed bile has plummeted.

Bear bile is extracted — often continuous­ly and painfully — from the animals’ gallbladde­rs and used in traditiona­l medicine in Vietnam, where the illegal practice remains widespread.

But consumers are shunning the farmed version in favour of bile taken from the nearly extinct wild bear population, which can cost 12 times more, and farmers can no longer earn what they used to from the illicit trade.

If consumer demand for wild bear gall bladders catches on, it could spell the end for wild bears, which are killed for the soughtafte­r organ.

The trend is also bad news for bears, whose owners can no longer afford to keep them alive.

“Farmers said it wasn’t profitable to keep the bears any more so they started feeding them less and let them die off,” said Brian Crudge, research programme manager at Free The Bears.

The number of captive bears has dropped since 2005, from about 4,500 to fewer than 800 today, according to official data and Crudge, who recently co-authored a study on the issue.

Some farmers, who can legally keep bears as pets but are not allowed to extract bile, have started handing over their bears.

One farmer said he used to earn US$10 (RM41) for 1ml of farmed bile, but now only makes about US$2, as consumers prefer to shell out for a supposedly higher quality product from wild bears.

He used to keep about a dozen bears in cages at his home and now has none, but just smiled when asked when happened to them, refusing to elaborate.

Vietnam has come under fire for failing to crack down on the illegal trade, but in a landmark decision last year, said it would abolish all bear farms by 2022.

It is likely to meet that goal, but not all will make it into sanctuarie­s with death rates likely to remain steady.

But a fortunate few will, like moon bears Hoa Lan and Hoa Tra, who were sent to a sanctuary in Ninh Binh province this week.

After being rescued from the farm where they have lived since 2005, they will spend a few weeks in quarantine before being allowed to frolic in the grass with their fellow rescuees, which will require some courage after so many years in a cage.

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