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Last animals set to leave ‘world’s worst zoo’ in Gaza

By AFP - Aug 23,2016 - Last updated at Aug 23,2016

KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza — A team of foreign veterinarians began taking measures on Tuesday to evacuate the last surviving animals from a zoo in the Gaza Strip that has been dubbed “the world’s worst”.

In front of each cage of the zoo in Khan Younis, one of the vets stops and fires an anaesthetic dart into monkeys, birds, porcupines, and the only tiger in the Palestinian enclave.

Three foreign vets and their assistants took part in their seventh and final visit on Tuesday, carefully sedating animals for medical examinations, before they will be taken out of the strip.

The animals will undergo a series of ultrasound scans and vaccinations before crossing the Erez checkpoint into Israel on Wednesday morning.

For months, Amir Khalil, an Austrian vet of Egyptian origin, and colleagues from the Four Paws non-governmental organisation, have made regular visits to the zoo in southern Gaza.

“Khan Younis Zoo has been known as the ‘worst zoo in the world’ since it became public last year that the zoo was crudely mummifying the animals that died in their care and displaying them,” Four Paws says on its website.

“Four Paws has been active in providing emergency food and supplies to the animals, but now we have the chance to rescue them all for good.”

 At one point in the past there were more than 100 animals housed at the zoo, but they were decimated by repeated wars and shortages of customers. 

 

 ‘Harsh conditions’ 

 

Now just 15 animals remain including a gazelle, pelicans, as well as the monkeys, porcupines and tiger.

But on Wednesday they will take the road to Israel and then to Jordan. 

The tiger will eventually travel to South Africa, but will stop in Israel to be transferred to a cage adapted to air transport, said Khalil. 

“A truck will come and take the animals to cross Erez,” he said.

After that the Khan Younis Zoo will permanently close its doors. 

“I am very sad,” laments owner Ziad Aweda. “I brought these animals from Libya, Sudan, Egypt and even South Africa to Gaza.”

 They are now going in the opposite direction “because of the harsh conditions of life, the weak economy and the severe blockade.”

 All that will remain of the zoo are the stuffed carcasses of some of the animals that died of starvation.

The nearly 2 million residents of Gaza are also suffering and find it difficult to get permits to Israel, which has maintained a blockade on the enclave for a decade.

Hamas, which runs Gaza, has fought three wars with Israel since 2008, the most recent in 2014 in which 2,251 Palestinians died, the majority civilians, according to the United Nations.

Seventy-three Israelis, including 67 soldiers, were also killed.

 

The Israeli blockade of the enclave and Egypt’s closed border have suffocated the economy, with Gazans now finding it more and more difficult to find money for leisure.

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