Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cruelty counts filed over koala deaths

- YAN ZHUANG

MELBOURNE, Australia — An Australian landowner and two companies have been hit with hundreds of animal cruelty charges after a land-clearing operation last year led to the deaths of 70 koalas, an episode that one lawmaker described as a “massacre.”

The authoritie­s discovered dozens of dead, injured or starving koalas on private property in Cape Bridgewate­r in southwest Victoria in February 2020, after the landowner and a forest and earth-moving business cleared their habitat, the state’s conservati­on regulator said in a statement Wednesday.

The operation wreaked havoc on more than 200 koalas, causing “unreasonab­le pain or suffering to dozens,” the regulator said.

Animal activists said trees had been bulldozed with the koalas still in them.

“Some were killed instantly, their bodies found trapped under heavy branches or strewn amongst piles of felled trees,” according to the conservati­on group Animals Australia, which sent veterinari­ans to the scene. “Some suffered traumatic injuries and broken bones. Some were orphaned and others were found huddled together in the few remaining trees left on the property.”

The authoritie­s found 21 dead koalas on the site, and an additional 49 that were found starving, dehydrated or suffering from fractures had to be euthanized. Seventy more koalas were treated for injuries, and 120 others were released back into the wild.

The deaths prompted national outrage when they were first reported by a resident on social media, and the Victoria state government vowed that those responsibl­e would be punished.

The property owner and business were charged with more than 250 animal cruelty offenses, including 36 counts of aggravated cruelty charges for causing fatal injuries.

Another contractin­g company was charged with a cruelty offense. The authoritie­s did not identify the landowner or the businesses.

The case is scheduled to be heard in court in February. The maximum penalty for one charge of aggravated animal cruelty leading to death is $157,000 for a business and $65,500 or two years’ imprisonme­nt for an individual.

Andy Meddick, a Victoria state lawmaker who is a member of the Animal Justice Party, said he was “relieved” that “hundreds of charges were laid for the Cape Bridgewate­r koala massacre.” He added, “I visited the site myself and saw the aftermath, and it was one of the worst things I’ve experience­d.”

Koalas are a protected species in Australia, and the marsupials are listed as vulnerable in the states of New South Wales, Queensland and the Australian Capital Territory.

Their numbers were severely affected by the 2019 fires that burned millions of acres in the country. Many were rescued, singed and dehydrated, from the wild.

While koalas have evolved to adapt to wildfires, the animals are facing new threats from climate change and human developmen­t, which have dislocated local population­s, impairing their ability to survive fires.

Animal activists said trees had been bulldozed with the koalas still in them.

 ?? (The New York Times/Victoria Conservati­on Regulator) ?? This koala was taken to a rehabilita­tion center after its habitat was destroyed in the Australian state of Victoria. Dozens of other koalas died.
(The New York Times/Victoria Conservati­on Regulator) This koala was taken to a rehabilita­tion center after its habitat was destroyed in the Australian state of Victoria. Dozens of other koalas died.

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