Pakistan's long ailing elephant dies

Pakistan's long ailing elephant dies

17-year-old Noor Jehan breathed her last at Karachi Zoo on Saturday

By Aamir Latif

KARACHI, Pakistan ( AA) - An African female elephant that has long been suffering from a string of diseases, died at a zoo in Pakistan's southern port city of Karachi on Saturday, an official confirmed.

Named after Noor Jehan, the queen of the fourth 17th-century Mughal emperor of the subcontinent Jehangir, the 17-year-old mammal was operated on by foreign veterinarians last week at Karachi Zoo but did not recover properly, with her condition worsening to an alarming extent, Kanwar Ayub, the director of Karachi Zoo, told Anadolu.

Noor Jehan, which was brought to Karachi Zoo along with three other elephants some 13 years ago, was mainly suffering from a huge hematoma, or pool of clotted blood, inside her abdomen in addition to intestinal issues.

She, earlier this week, had fallen in a pond and could not pull herself out due to her weak hinds badly affected by the illnesses she had been suffering from for months apparently because of inadequate care and treatment.

Later, on the recommendation by Four Paws, a global animal welfare organization, the zoo staff used a crane, ropes and belts to pull her out.

She was one of the last four captive elephants in Pakistan, all of them in Karachi, including two at the zoo.

A video of Noor Jehan showing her limping and struggling to stand apparently due to weakness went viral on social and mainstream media last week, sparking a public outcry and calls for shutting down the zoo.

"It saddens us immensely that Noor Jehan’s story came to such a heartbreaking ending. We would like to thank everyone who worked day and night during these challenging times to try and give Noor Jehan a chance at survival. We hope the authorities in Pakistan will take Noor Jehan’s sad fate as an example and do better for captive wild animals in the country in the future," Four Paws said, welcoming the government's decision to consider closing down Karachi Zoo permanently.

A team of Austrian and Egyptian vets was scheduled to arrive in Karachi next week to assess Noor Jehan's condition.

Four Paws had also arranged the transfer of 36-year-old Kaavan, the country’s "loneliest" elephant, to a wildlife sanctuary in Cambodia in November 2020, to spend its remaining years following a years-long campaign by animal lovers from across the globe.

Animal rights groups have long been blaming the zoo management, which is already understaffed and without trained vets, for neglect and maltreatment that has resulted in deaths of several wild animals in recent years.

The veterinarians have already suggested shifting Madhubala, now the only elephant at Karachi Zoo to "specific species housing,” fearing that she might suffer a similar fate due to "inappropriate" conditions at the facility.

Last year, an Austrian veterinarian team operated on Madhubala, an 18-year-old elephant named after a legendary Indian actress, to relieve her pain caused by a broken tusk infection.

Endorsing the suggestion, Ayub said that arrangements are being made to relocate Madhubala to the city's only Safari Park, where another two elephants are living in an "adequate environment."

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