Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Careless zoo claims another life — motherless orangutan drowns

- By Malaka Rodrigo

The Dehiwala zoo’s baby orangutan, aged about five years, drowned last week in the moat that surrounds its den. It was alone in its den on the night of April 21.

Its mother, too, died last December. As a rule, animals that spend the day in larger, open enclosures are caged at night for safety reasons, but this baby orangutan had refused to go into the cage. The curator had let the orangutan stay in the open enclosure and had asked a zookeeper to watch over it.

The zookeeper says the orangutan was seen in the middle of the den at about 5:30 am. He had left the area and when he returned, the orangutan was missing. Zoo staff noticed it had drowned. The lifeless body was taken to the zoo hospital.

The director general of the Zoological Gardens, Dr. Thilak Premakanth­a said the zookeeper was interdicte­d and the curators has been transferre­d to other sections.

“It is clear that there is some negligence, so an investigat­ion has started and those responsibl­e will be punished,” Dr. Premakanth­a said. A mechanism to make sure all animals in open enclosures are caged at night would be implemente­d. A risk assessment is being made.

Named Richie, the orangutan was born in 2017 to mother Aki and father Ufo.

The pair was received from Indonesia’s Ragunan Zoo.

This pair had given birth to a male in 2010. It was named Sakiffo. The occasion was celebrated as the birth of the first orangutan baby in Dehiwala in 28 years.

Orangutans are a critically endangered great ape found in Indonesia and Malaysia where zoologists believe only about 60,000 are living in the wild. Few hundred of orangutans are in captivity in zoos and the informatio­n of these animals is maintained in a global registry called studbook. The orangutan studbook managed by a zoo in the United States indicates that Sri Lanka has received seven orangutans since the 1970s and has recorded four births.

Animal welfare activists allege that the national zoo is incapable of looking after animals and that many face untimely deaths.

The real causes that led to the death of the orangutan must be addressed, they say, rather than just punishing only a guard.

There are concerns that the zoo operation is corrupt and its management politicise­d. The most recent director, Shermila Rajapaksha, was removed after a dispute with zoo workers.

 ?? (Pic courtesy Dehiwala zoo Facebook Page) ?? In happier times: Richie with its mother in 2017
(Pic courtesy Dehiwala zoo Facebook Page) In happier times: Richie with its mother in 2017
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