Tiger from 'worst zoo' gets new home
Laziz the tiger drinks water in a cage upon arrival at O.R. Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg, South Africa, on Thursday. THEMBA HADEBE/ASSOCIATED PRESS |
A Bengal tiger rescued from what activists have called "the worst zoo in the world" arrived in South Africa for a new home on Thursday, after living in a small cage in Gaza alongside another tiger's stuffed corpse.
The 9-year-old male, known as Laziz, arrived by plane. His handlers said he was in good condition and calm after traveling in a wooden crate.
The Four Paws charity launched a rescue effort at the Khan Younis Zoo in Gaza when it discovered that the zoo was displaying the stuffed corpses of animals that had died from stress, disease and starvation.
After the zoo asked for help, Four Paws removed 15 animals on Wednesday, including five monkeys, a porcupine and an emu. Most were destined for an animal sanctuary in Jordan.
The tiger was taken to the Lionsrock Big Cat Sanctuary in the town of Bethlehem in South Africa's Free State province. He took a few groggy steps into his new enclosure, used an old tree trunk as a scratching post and collapsed under a shelter to sleep off the effects of a sedative.
"Laziz is in good condition apart from a scratch on one side of his face, which comes from the crate," Marina Strydom, a veterinarian at Lionsrock, said on Thursday.
The facility already holds about 100 big cats that have been rescued from zoos and circuses around the world. The tiger's new enclosure is several hectares in size with tree trunks, rocks and makeshift structures on which to climb.
Meals will mostly include donkey meat and cow legs.
Years of conflict, longstanding negligence and outbreaks of disease have killed many animals in captivity in Gaza.