PETA People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals
January 2018
Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa has banned the country’s live-elephant trade!
Thanks to global outrage over Zimbabwe’s practice of capturing wild baby elephants and selling them internationally for use in circuses and elephant-ride tourist traps, Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa has banned the country’s live-elephant trade.
The ban also applies to other endangered wild animals—including
rhinoceroses, lions, and pangolins—and represents a complete reversal of the
government’s previous position on the trade in exotic animals. PETA and
animal advocates around the world will continue to work to end all trade in
live elephants and other animals for captivity.
Backgrouond
The following was originally published on January 11, 2018:
Even as Africa’s elephant population dwindles, countries including the U.S.,
China, Mexico, and Cuba are still buying baby elephants who were captured in
the wild, taken away from their mothers and herds, and sold into a lifetime
of deprivation in roadside zoos and for elephant-ride attractions.
Reportedly, on the same day last week that China banned the sale of ivory
amidst global celebration, the country was quietly ushering in 31 baby
elephants who had been captured in Zimbabwe. A whistleblower shot video
footage of one of them being captured in August by the Zimbabwe Parks and
Wildlife Management Authority in the Hwange National Park and sent it to
reporters.
During a typical capture, wildlife officials fly over a herd in
helicopters, spot a young elephant, and shoot him or her with tranquilizers.
As the baby falls, the other elephants rush to help, so the helicopter
dive-bombs them to drive them away. Kidnappers on the ground drag the baby
onto a trailer and take the animal to a holding area, where he or she will
wait with other captured babies until being sold.
The eyewitness video shows the captors kicking a baby in the head—and this
is just the beginning of the abuse she will suffer as a prisoner in the
animal-entertainment industry.
In nature, elephants travel up to 30 miles a day with their herds. In
captivity, they’re relegated to tiny enclosures. The babies are tied down
and beaten with bullhooks and other instruments designed to inflict pain
until their spirits are broken and they’re willing to obey their “trainers”
in order to avoid punishment. They’re routinely denied adequate space, food,
water, and needed veterinary care, and they often suffer from debilitating
health problems. Most die prematurely.
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