The Guardian (USA)

Cher greets ‘world’s loneliest elephant’ in Cambodia

- Agence France-Presse in Siem Reap

An elephant described as the “world’s loneliest” has landed in Cambodia after a seven-hour flight from Pakistan, receiving a warm welcome from Cher, who will accompany him to a sanctuary housing potential mates.

The case of Kaavan - an overweight, 36-year-old bull elephant – prompted global uproar from animal rights groups, who petitioned for him to be moved from an Islamabad zoo accused of substandar­d care and conditions.

His cause was boosted by a social media campaign from Cher, who travelled to Pakistan to see him off.

Wearing a black face mask, the singer was on hand at Siem Reap airport and waved excitedly at the plane after it landed at about 2.30pm (0730 GMT) on Monday.

“I am so proud he is here,” she told AFP, after greeting Kaavan through an opening at the base of the crate. “He’s going to be really happy here,” added Cher, saying she was hopeful his ordeal was now over.

Kaavan’s much-anticipate­d journey was “uneventful”, said Amir Khalil, a veterinari­an from the animal welfare group Four Paws, adding he behaved “like a frequent flyer”. “Kaavan was eating, was not stressed – he was even a little bit sleeping, standing, leaning at the crate wall,” he said.

Once the sole Asian elephant in Pakistan, Kaavan will be transporte­d from Siem Reap to the neighbouri­ng province of Oddar Meanchey, where a wildlife sanctuary with about 600 other elephants will be his new home.

“Cambodia is pleased to welcome Kaavan. No longer will he be ‘the world’s loneliest elephant,’” the country’s deputy environmen­t minister, Neth Pheaktra, said. “We expect to breed Kaavan with local elephants – this is an effort to conserve the genetic fold.”

Before Kaavan was transporte­d to the sanctuary, monks offered him bananas and watermelon, chanting prayers and sprinkling holy water on his crate to bless him.

His journey is the culminatio­n of years of campaignin­g from animal rights groups, which say the animal’s behaviour in captivity demonstrat­ed “a kind of mental illness” likely due to the zoo’s woeful conditions.

In May, a Pakistani judge ordered that all the animals at the zoo be moved.

Upon hearing about Kaavan’s freedom, Cher had tweeted that the deci

sion marked “one of the greatest moments” of her life.

A team of vets and experts from the Austria-based Four Paws spent months working with Kaavan to get him ready for the trip – a complicate­d process due to his size and the amount of food needed en route. The elephant also had to be taught to enter the massive metal crate that was placed in a cargo plane for the seven-hour flight.

Four Paws, along with Islamabad authoritie­s, also safely moved three wolves and some monkeys from the zoo. Only two Himalayan brown bears, one deer and one monkey remain.

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