SLOTH
BEAR REHABILITATION CENTRE INAUGURATED
BANGALORE, November 30, 2002: Freed
from the clutches of their captors, these sloth bears
will now have a chance to be as wild as they can get.
A bear rehabilitation centre which will house 22 rescued
bears was inaugurated today at the Bannerghatta Biological
Park near here.
The sloth bear rehabilitation centre is the first such
functioning centre for rescued sloth bears from keepers
of dancing bears (called kalandars) in India. The project,
conceived as a “wild within walls” under
the patronage of Ms Maneka Gandhi, former minister for
social justice and empowerment, will provide shelter
to 22 of these animals, and will also be able to hold
more confiscated bears in the future.
The project, initiated in 2000 in the Bannerghatta
Biological Park, is a collaborative effort of the Zoo
Authority of Karnataka, the forest department of the
Government of Karnataka, Wildlife Trust of India (WTI)
and the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW),
apart from the Central Zoo Authority, Ministry of Environment
and Forests, Government of India.
Stanley Johnson, Senior Advisor, International Fund
for Animal Welfare (IFAW), said, “I am very happy
that the bear rehabilitation centre is being inaugurated.
It is an example of how wildlife conservation and animal
welfare can combine to provide help to animals in distress.”
Joanne Fielder, IFAW Emergency Relief Veterinarian
, said the organisation was pleased to be involved with
the project which aims to provide the highest possible
standards of care possible to those bears rescued from
the entertainment industry, as detailed by the 1998
legislation banning the use of lions, tigers, bears
and monkeys from training and exhibition. “This
legislation will hopefully provide an excellent example
of animal welfare to numerous other countries,”
she said.
The project is being developed over 40 acres of land
in the Bannerghatta Biological Park, while the technical
expertise is being provided by international experts
on bears. The sloth bears will have access to its natural
foods like termites, and other insects, honey and a
variety of fruit-bearing trees in their new abode. They
will also be fed some quantities of substitute foods
like cooked ragi (a cereal common in South India), cooked
rice, jaggery, coconut, sugarcane, bananas, milk, and
other veterinary supplements.
Fielder said the resident bears will have their lives
changed immeasurably, from the cruel and unnatural confinement
of life as a dancing street bear, to the luxury of a
large naturally vegetated enclosure, where the bears
are once again able to interact freely with conspecifics
(those belonging to their own species). |