The Star Malaysia

A jumbo issue

Drop in Thailand’s tourism leaves jumbos underfed

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An elephant foraging for food next to the Patara Elephant Farm in an area affected by drought near Chiang Mai, where many camps have been shuttered by the government due to fears of the coronaviru­s spreading. Underfed and chained up for endless hours, campaigner­s warn that many elephants working in Thailand’s tourism sector may starve, be sold to zoos or shifted into the illegal logging trade as the coronaviru­s decimates visitor numbers.

Thailand UNDeRFeD and chained up for endless hours, many elephants working in Thailand’s tourism sector may starve, be sold to zoos or be shifted into the illegal logging trade, campaigner­s warn, as the coronaviru­s decimates visitor numbers.

Before the virus, life for the kingdom’s estimated 2,000 elephants working in tourism was already stressful, with abusive methods often used to “break them” into giving rides and performing tricks at moneyspinn­ing animal shows.

With global travel paralysed, the animals are unable to pay their way, including the 300kg of food a day a captive elephant needs to survive.

elephant camps and conservati­onists warn hunger and the threat of renewed exploitati­on lie ahead, without an urgent bailout.

“My boss is doing what he can but we have no money,” Kosin, a mahout – or elephant handler – says of the Chiang Mai camp where his elephant ekkasit is living on a restricted diet.

Footage sent from another camp in the area shows lines of elephants tethered to wooden poles, some visibly distressed, rocking their heads back and forth.

Around 2,000 elephants are currently “unemployed” as the virus eviscerate­s Thailand’s tourist industry, says Theerapat Trungpraka­n, president of the Thai elephant Alliance Associatio­n.

The lack of cash is limiting the fibrous food available to the elephants “which will have a physical effect”, he added.

Wages for the mahouts who look after them have dropped by 70%.

Theerapat fears the creatures could soon be used in illegal logging activities along the Thai-Myanmar border – in breach of a 30-year-old law banning the use of elephants to transport wood.

“Others could be forced (to beg) on the streets,” he said.

It is yet another twist in the saga of the exploitati­on of elephants, which animal rights campaigner­s have long been fighting to protect from the abusive tourism industry.

For those hawking a once-in-a-lifetime experience with the giant creatures – whether from afar or up close – the slump began in late January.

Chinese visitors, who make up the majority of Thailand’s 40 million tourists, plunged by more than 80% in February as China locked down cities hard-hit by the virus and banned external travel.

By March, the travel restrictio­ns into Thailand – which has 1,388 confirmed cases of the virus – had extended to Western countries.

With elephants increasing­ly malnourish­ed due to the loss of income, the situation is “at a crisis point”, says Saengduean Chailert, owner of elephant Nature Park.

Calls are mounting for the government to fund stricken camps to ensure the welfare of elephants.

“We need 1,000 baht a day (about RM132) for each elephant,” says Apichet Duangdee, who runs the elephant Rescue Park.

Freeing his eight mammals rescued from circuses and loggers into the forests is out of the question as they would likely be killed in territoria­l fights with wild elephants.

he is planning to take out a two million baht (RM265,046) loan soon to keep his elephants fed.

“I will not abandon them,” he added. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Stressful condition: a file photo showing an elephant lifting a tourist as other visitors take photos in Chang siam park in pattaya. — aFp
Stressful condition: a file photo showing an elephant lifting a tourist as other visitors take photos in Chang siam park in pattaya. — aFp

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