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    Categories: Animals/Petslife

The ‘World’s Loneliest Elephant’ Is Finally Set To Be Freed From Horror Zoo


A lonely elephant that was kept in horrible conditions at a zoo in Pakistan has finally been rescued after being forced to live in a tiny enclosure for decades.

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Kaavan is a 35-year-old bull elephant whose story has gone viral all around the world after the horrible truth about the zoo it was kept in came to light.

©AFP via Getty Images [left] / ©EPA [right]

The elephant was reportedly living in a tiny enclosure at Islamabad zoo in Pakistan where he had little space to move for long 35 years. While Kaavan was living together with his elephant partner Saheli, things took a turn for the worse when she died in 2012.

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Following Saheli’s death, Kaavan started suffering from behavioral issues caused by loneliness. After he had also become more aggressive towards his carers, the elephant was put on a short leash, meaning he had even less space to walk around than before.

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©EPA

Fortunately, after a four-year-long campaign to rescue the animal and a judge’s order to close the zoo, Kaavan has been approved for transfer to a sanctuary in Cambodia.

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As Pakistani officials now also confirmed, the gentle giant is scheduled to be airlifted to his new home this Sunday.

©EPA

Before the 35-year-old elephant was allowed to take on the life-changing journey, experts had to make sure he was prepared for travel in a metal cage.

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“We want to wish him a happy retirement,” Marion Lombard of Four Paws International, an international animal welfare organization behind Kaavan’s rescue, expressed.

©AFP via Getty Images

As Four Paws’ Martin Bauer previously explained, the elephant’s recovery will be long and hard because the animal is suffering from behavioral issues caused by loneliness.

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As the medical examination of Kaavan revealed, he showed signs of malnutrition despite being overweight. In addition, the poor elephant faced a series of physical health problems, including overgrown and cracked nails, caused by living in a tiny enclosure for years.

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“He also developed stereotypical behavior, which means he shakes his head back and forth for hours. This is mainly because he is simply bored,” Bauer explained.

©EPA

Following decades of horrible conditions, the zoo is finally closing down and Kaavan has been prepared for his new life in Cambodia Wildlife Sanctuary.

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To make sure that the animal will suffer as little as possible during air transport, Kaavan will be accompanied by a team of vets and animal handlers.

©AFP via Getty Images

“The team is very experienced and conditions for his recovery are very good. He will be able to form a group with other elephants and actually live in a vast area of his natural habitat,” Dr. Amir Khalil, the project development head at Four Paws International, said.

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“Contact with other elephants will help him establish his position within his new family group and also gain more self-confidence.”

 

Replaced!