The Star Malaysia

Vets race to save tigers from Thai temple

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Veterinari­ans rush to cure tigers infected with canine distemper after taking them away from controvers­ial temple.

RATCHABURI: Officials at a sanctuary in Thailand said they are racing to keep dozens of tigers alive after more than 80 died from disease following their confiscati­on from a controvers­ial temple.

The Wat Pha Luang Ta Bua temple – better known as the “Tiger Temple” – had for years attracted tourists with the promise of being able to pose for photos next to the big cats.

But repeated allegation­s of exploitati­on led officials to confiscate the animals, moving them to two nearby sanctuarie­s in 2016.

This week experts said 86 of the 147 tigers have died, blaming the deaths on canine distemper virus typically found in dogs.

The surviving animals have been separated into groups depending on their symptoms, Kao Pratubchan­g sanctuary head Banpot Maleehuan told reporters on Friday.

“For the group with serious symptoms, the vets will plan to operate on them to make sure they live longer,” he said.

The ones with less severe symptoms will receive medicine.

The enclosures in a different part of sanctuary contained some of the surviving tigers, and Banpot told reporters they are planning to build a large yard “so they can relax”.

Thailand gets some 38 million tourists a year, with many of them attracted by a large wildlife tourism industry. Activists say abuse is rife in the industry.

Raids in 2016 on the Tiger Temple uncovered dozens of dead tiger cubs inside a freezer.

Legal cases against the temple are ongoing.

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 ?? — AFP ?? Here, kitty: A wildlife official scanning the microchip implanted in a tiger at the Kanchanabu­ri temple in this file picture.
— AFP Here, kitty: A wildlife official scanning the microchip implanted in a tiger at the Kanchanabu­ri temple in this file picture.

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