Baltimore Sun

Even elephants are looking for work

Thailand’s tourism industry takes hit during virus crisis

- By Richard C. Paddock and Muktita Suhartono

BANGKOK — More than a decade ago, it was common for elephant owners to take their animals into Thailand’s cities and beg in the streets. Other elephants were put to work by illegal loggers along the border with Myanmar to harvest timber and haul it out of the forest. Gradually, Thailand succeeded in reducing such practices and improving the lives of domesticat­ed elephants. But now, the coronaviru­s that is sickening humans around the world may threaten to undo that progress.

A sudden drop in foreign tourists has forced the closing of dozens of elephant parks and similar tourist attraction­s, putting more than 1,000 elephants in Thailand out of work and endangerin­g their futures, operators of the attraction­s said.

In recent years, the main concern that animal welfare advocates have raised about Thailand’s many elephant attraction­s has been whether it is abusive for tourists to ride the creatures. But for many owners, just keeping them fed is now a more urgent concern. Feeding an elephant can cost as much as $40 a day — more than three times the minimum daily wage in Thailand.

Theerapat Trungpraka­n, president of the Thai Elephant Alliance Associatio­n, a group of elephant attraction operators, said he feared that unless the government intervened, some elephants would be forced back onto the streets or even into illegal logging operations.

“We don’t want that loop of survival alternativ­es to come back,” Theerapat said. “It will endanger the welfare of the elephants, such as having the elephants roaming the streets begging for bananas or sugar cane.”

Thailand, which as of Tuesday had reported 827 coronaviru­s cases and four deaths, has sought to stop the spread of the virus by closing schools and entertainm­ent venues and by encouragin­g people to stay home. The initial outbreak in China led to a sudden drop in visitors to Thailand, as both countries restricted travel. In 2019, China contribute­d more than a quarter of Thailand’s 40 million tourists.

In February, overall tourist arrivals in Thailand were down by 44% compared with a year earlier. Tourism has plunged even further in March with new limits on travel and activity.

Tourism is a huge part of the Thai economy. Before the virus struck, travel and tourism accounted for more than 20% of the country’s gross domestic product and employed nearly 16% of the workforce.

The effects have been felt nationwide. Hotel rooms are vacant and taxis idle. Major events have been postponed or canceled, including the Thai New Year festivals normally held in April as well as the first WBCMuay Thai World Convention, which had been scheduled for this month in Bangkok. The elephant attraction­s have been hit hard, operators say.

In northern Thailand, 85 such businesses have temporaril­y halted operations because of a lack of visitors, said Borpit Chailert, general manager of Maetaeng Elephant Park, north of the city of Chiang Mai.

He said the Maetaeng park, one of the country’s larger operations, was still open, but visitors were down by 90%, forcing the company to reduce employees’ hours. The park used to get as many as 1,000 visitors a day. On Saturday, there were only four.

Thailand has about 3,800 domesticat­ed elephants. Releasing them into the forest, where about 3,000 wild elephants live, is illegal under Thai law; in the forest, domesticat­ed elephants would compete with wild counterpar­ts.

“They cannot look for food in the forest because they are used to being fed,” Borpit said. “Imagine if we released around 3,000 domesticat­ed elephants into the forest at the same time. There would be no food to feed all the elephants.”

Elephants are Thailand’s national symbol. Some were used in logging operations for generation­s before 1989, when Thailand, facing the rapid destructio­n of its forests, banned nearly all commercial logging.

More recently, many captive elephants have been put to work in tourist attraction­s, often in small operations with a dozen or so animals, where visitors can ride them. Some larger venues also offer elephant rides.

Animal welfare advocates say the training and treatment of elephants in such operations are often abusive, and they call for an end to using the animals in circuses or letting tourists ride them. They say it is better for tourists simply to observe the animals in refuges and sanctuarie­s.

A group that promotes the welfare of elephants in Thailand, the Friends of the Asian Elephant Foundation, has long urged the government to establish a fund for this kind of tourism emergency.

Theerapat said most of the elephants in Thailand’s attraction­s were rented from their owners. If the parks return them, he said, some owners might decide they have no choice but to beg on the streets.

One owner, Amnuai Charornsuk­sombat, whose family has kept elephants for generation­s, said he retrieved five of the animals last week from a tourist attraction where they had been working.

The elephants no longer get sugar cane and bananas, which are too expensive, but forage for grass in nearby fields and eat corn stalks that Amnuai buys from farmers.

But no matter how hard it gets, Amnuai said, it would never occur to him to take his elephants and beg.

“For us, elephants are family members,” he said. “They are not pets. To bring them to do that would be a disgrace. They are family, so we will get through this together. Family takes care of each other.”

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