After the shows are over, the innocent dolphins are locked in what animal welfare group Dolphin Project describes as “coffin-like boxes” for days and transported in trucks from event to event throughout the country.... However, harmful dolphin performances remain legal at “conservation institutions,” including zoos and safari and animal parks.
Image Credit:
DolphinProject.com
Following years of protest against one of Indonesia’s cruelest forms
of “entertainment,” the country’s traveling dolphin circuses are
officially banned via the Ministry of Environment and Forestry.
The mobile shows force wild dolphins to perform for the “pleasure”
of the public by starving them and making the poor creatures carry
out unnatural routines to earn small morsels of fish.
The dolphins perform these routines over and over again in tiny
pools of water so highly chlorinated that the splashes can sting the
eyes of audience members. With music blaring in the background, the
frightened animals jump through hoops blazing with fire.
One of the traveling dolphin circuses closed by Indonesian
authorities. Image Credit:
DolphinProject.com
After the shows are over, the innocent dolphins are locked in what
animal welfare group Dolphin Project describes as “coffin-like
boxes” for days and transported in trucks from event to event
throughout the country.
In a major victory for these beautiful creatures, on February 5, the
ministry decided not to renew permits for any traveling dolphin
circus shows, putting them out of business for good.
In a letter to CNN Indonesia, Indra Explotasia, the head of the
engineering center of the ministry, wrote that permits for all
dolphin shows taking place outside of “a conservation institution or
in a traveling dolphin demonstration” had expired and would not be
renewed.
Despite the monumental success achieved in shutting down these
shows, there is still work to be done. Harmful dolphin performances
remain legal at “conservation institutions,” including zoos and
safari and animal parks.