The New Zealand Herald

Elephants pack their trunks

Pachyderms seem happy to join dole queue in Thailand

- Busaba Sivasomboo­n and Grant Peck

The millions of unemployed in Thailand due to the coronaviru­s include elephants dependent on tourists to feed their voracious appetites. With scant numbers of foreign visitors, commercial elephant camps and sanctuarie­s lack funds for their upkeep and have sent more than 100 of the animals trudging as far as 150km back to their homes.

The Save Elephant Foundation in the northern province of Chiang

Mai has been promoting the elephants’ return to the greener pastures of home.

The foundation supports fundraisin­g appeals to feed animals still housed at tourist parks, but also believes it is good for them to return to their natural habitat where they can be more selfsuffic­ient.

The situation is critical. Londonbase­d World Animal Protection says as many as 2000 tame elephants are at risk of starvation because their owners are unable to feed them.

Since last month, more than 100 of the animals have marched from all over Chiang Mai to their homeland of Mae Chaem, which is dotted with villages where members of the Karen ethnic minority live and traditiona­lly keep elephants.

Save Elephant’s founder,

At first I thought the situation would be back to normal within a month or two. At the end of April, I lost all hope.

Sadudee Serichevee

Saengduean Chailert, said the project to bring unemployed elephants home was launched in response to appeals from their owners.

Her group promotes settling elephants where they can live alongside villagers in sustainabl­e eco-friendly communitie­s. It believes the animals are abused at many high-profile tourist attraction­s.

Sadudee Serichevee owns four elephants in Chiang Mai’s Mae Wang district.

He followed the foundation’s approach in setting up his own small Karen Elephant Experience park with elephants brought from Mae Chaem’s Ban Huay Bong, his wife’s village.

But his good intentions were no

match for the coronaviru­s.

“At first I thought the situation would be back to normal within a month or two. At the end of April, I lost all hope,” Sadudee said.

He and his wife agreed to bring their elephants back to her village because they could no longer shoulder the monthly expenses of close to 200,000 baht ($10,120) for rental of land and facilities, salaries for handlers – known as mahouts – and food.

Elephants eat as much as 300kg a day of grass and vegetables.

They convinced some other owners to make the 150km trek on foot with them.

Trucking the animals is prohibitiv­ely expensive for owners of small parks, and elephants can maintain a walking speed of 7.25 kph.

Their caravan of 11 elephants, their owners and their mahouts, set out on April 30, travelling over hills, on paved and dirt roads. They were greeted by a welcomehom­e party at Ban Huay Bong.

“These elephants have not had a chance to return home for 20 years. They seem to be very happy when arriving home, they make their happy noises, they run to the creek near the village and have fun along with our children,” Sadudee said.

The project is also active in the northeaste­rn province of Surin, famous for its annual elephant festival. The province’s Tha Tum district welcomed about 40 of them back last month.

“We don’t know when Covid-19 will go away,” said Save Elephant’s Saengduean. “So this is our task, to help feed the elephants that were laid off because of the outbreak.”

 ?? Photo / AP ?? In Thailand, many tame elephants are being sent back to their home provinces as owners can’t afford their upkeep.
Photo / AP In Thailand, many tame elephants are being sent back to their home provinces as owners can’t afford their upkeep.
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