Bear rescue amidst COVID-19 pandemic
FOUR PAWS provides species-appropriate home for two bears in Vietnam
20 May 2020 – Global animal welfare organisation FOUR PAWS successfully completed its first bear rescue of the year on May 20 in Vietnam. Following strict safety precautions due to the coronavirus pandemic, the organisation was able to transfer two female Asiatic black bears to its BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh in Northern Vietnam. Cuc and Nhai are approximately 18 years old and were kept in a private backyard their whole life. In Vietnam, bears in captivity are still illegally abused for their bile, which is used as a remedy in traditional medicine. Demand for bear bile for healing purposes is reportedly declining, yet, up to 400 bears in Vietnam are still living in cruel conditions on bear farms or in single keeping.
Coronavirus-related lockdowns and border closures have prevented FOUR PAWS from rescuing animals. However, a local FOUR PAWS team made the 60-kilometre journey from the bear sanctuary in Ninh Binh to nearby Ha Nam province, where the bears were kept in separate cages in a private backyard. Their former owner got the Asiatic black bears as cubs in 2002. FOUR PAWS was asked by the authorities to take over the bears after their owner gave them up voluntarily.
The experienced team at BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh will now provide Cuc and Nhai with all the care they need in order to adjust to the species-appropriate surroundings and regain their natural instincts.
Safety precautions in demanding times
Due to the ongoing pandemic, the FOUR PAWS team operated under strict safety precautions. “Everyone was wearing face masks, in addition to gloves which we always wear on rescues, and all people on-site tried to keep their distance from each other as much as they could. We follow similar regulations in our daily work at the sanctuary. Our vehicles were disinfected upon leaving the farm, and again back at the sanctuary,” says Emily Lloyd, Animal Manager at BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh. The sanctuary was recently reopened for small groups of visitors and guided tours. Temperature checks and wearing masks are compulsory before entering. “The bears are oblivious, as they should be, for them nothing has changed. Newly rescued bears are always placed in a three-week-quarantine to make sure they don’t transmit any diseases to the other bears,” says Lloyd. So far there are no reports that bears are susceptible to coronavirus infection.
Sanctuary for a total of 100 bears in Northern Vietnam
FOUR PAWS is working with local partners to free as many bears as possible from their sad fate. With BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh, FOUR PAWS is helping the Vietnamese government to close bear farms and end the cruel practice of bile extraction once and for all. Currently the sanctuary is undergoing building work to expand and once this is all completed, up to 100 rescued bears will be able to find a new home on ten hectares of land. Visitors can see how the 29 bears that have been rescued so far are living species-appropriate lives in spacious open-air enclosures with ponds, trees, climbing and hiding places. BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh is not only a safe home for former bile bears, it is also an awareness and education centre for wildlife conservation in Vietnam.
Elise Burgess
Head of CommunicationsM: 0423 873 382
FOUR PAWS Australia
GPO Box 2845
SYDNEY NSW 2001
Main Phone: 1800 454 228
FOUR PAWS is the global animal welfare organisation for animals under direct human influence, which reveals suffering, rescues animals in need and protects them.
Founded in 1988 in Vienna by Heli Dungler and friends, the organisation advocates for a world where humans treat animals with respect, empathy and understanding. The sustainable campaigns and projects of FOUR PAWS focus on companion animals including stray dogs and cats, animals in fashion, farm animals, and wild animals – such as bears, big cats, and orangutans – kept in inappropriate conditions as well as in disaster and conflict zones.
With offices in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, France, Germany, Kosovo, the Netherlands, Switzerland, South Africa, Thailand, Ukraine, the UK, the USA, and Vietnam as well as sanctuaries for rescued animals in eleven countries, FOUR PAWS provides rapid help and long-term solutions. www.four-paws.org.au