Bendi新闻
>
Freezers Full of Dead Tigers Found Inside Chinese Zoo

Freezers Full of Dead Tigers Found Inside Chinese Zoo

7月前

Fuyang Wildlife Park is accused of keeping animals in horrifying conditions, leading to dozens of unnatural deaths.
By He Qitong and Li Dongxu
A wildlife park in east China’s Anhui province is facing accusations of keeping animals in horrifying conditions, causing more than a dozen Siberian tigers to die of unnatural causes.
The shocking investigation — undertaken by a magazine owned by the state-run China News Service — has sparked outrage in China since its publication on Monday, leading to calls for the park’s owners to face legal consequences.
Fuyang Wildlife Park is accused of a litany of malpractices, including illegally breeding protected species, selling animals without a license, keeping animals in inhumane conditions, allowing many to die due to neglect, and failing to dispose of their bodies.
The animals that died of unnatural causes included 20 Siberian tigers, two African lions, three giraffes, and several macaques, according to the report.
During a visit to the park this past Friday, reporters discovered that the bodies of a number of animal cubs were being stored in freezers onsite. A separate cold storage facility contained piles of bodies of adult tigers, lions, giraffes, and bears.
Black bears living in the park are kept inside iron cages all year round, the report found. The bears have worn away the fur on their heads by rubbing against the cages, leaving their scalps bare. One bear is now reportedly unable to walk after being kept in such a confined space for a long time.
Several Siberian tigers — a class-1 protected species in China — are also being kept inside cages exposed to the elements, according to the report. Other tigers and lions are kept inside small huts with little natural light.

The cabin where the bodies of dead animals were frozen at Fuyang Wildlife Park, Anhui province, 2024. From @中国慈善家杂志 on Weibo

The story has triggered an outcry in China, with a related hashtag receiving over 100 million views on the microblogging platform Weibo. Many commenters expressed anger at the park and questioned how it had been able to continue operating for so long.
“These are not small animals, how can 20 tigers die without anyone knowing?” read one highly upvoted comment. “It’s not an animal park, it’s an animal prison,” another user wrote.
Soon after the report’s publication on Monday, Fuyang Wildlife Park announced it was shutting down temporarily until Wednesday due to “upgrades being made to certain areas of the park.”
The same day, a staff member at the park surnamed Pan told domestic media that the dead tigers mentioned in recent media reports “do not belong to our zoo, but to another boss — we’re not sure what happened.”
Municipal authorities in Fuyang — the city where the park is located — have confirmed that they have established a task force to investigate the park.
“If Fuyang Wildlife Park has been keeping national first-class protected wildlife in cages for a long time without providing them with space to exercise, it constitutes abusive behavior and could be deemed illegal,” Li Enze, executive director of Beijing Yipai Law Firm’s Public Welfare Legal Center, told domestic media.
“A large number of animals such as Siberian tigers and African lions have already died, which requires further investigation. The culprits should be held accountable,” Li added.
Murky dealings
The terrible conditions inside the park appear to be related to the project’s long history of business disputes and financial troubles.
The park is owned by a private company named Anhui Qicai Wildlife Park. Construction on the facility began in March 2018, with an initial investment of 500 million yuan ($69 million), according to Fuyang municipal records.
But the project was beset by disputes over land usage rights, which meant construction was not fully completed until 2021.
The delays led to yet more disputes. The company providing the animals, Fuyang Tengfei Company, began delivering animals to the half-finished park in 2018, including a shipment of 12 giraffes. One of those giraffes reportedly died in 2019.
In 2019, the park’s owners asked Tengfei to remove the animals, but the company refused. For the next two years, the two parties were reportedly locked in a dispute and renegotiated their contract several times.
Meanwhile, the park applied for licenses to breed Siberian tigers several times, but these applications were rejected on the grounds that the park lacked adequate facilities to do so. This suggests that the park has been illegally breeding tigers for several years.
The park finally opened in 2021, while China was still implementing strict pandemic controls, and appeared to be under financial pressure. When the park faced backlash over its 98 yuan ticket prices, which were far higher than other zoos in Anhui, it released a statement arguing that as a private zoo with no government investment or subsidies, it had no choice but to charge high prices.
All of these challenges reportedly had an impact on the welfare of the animals within the park. Li Lianghua, the owner of Tengfei Company, told domestic media that the park’s utilities were cut off at several points, causing some animals to die of thirst, starvation, and illness. The business disputes also led a number of trained staff to quit, which had an impact on park management.
According to the local forestry authority, however, part of the reason behind the tragedy was that these tigers were inbred, and had poor genetics. Some tigers died from old age or because of general poor health, said the authority.
Despite this, the Fuyang Municipal Bureau of Culture and Tourism issued a notice confirming that the park was a 3A-level tourist attraction as recently as 2023.
(Header image: A Siberian tiger is kept in a dark room at Fuyang Wildlife Park, Anhui province, 2024. From @中国慈善家杂志 on Weibo)

Download the new Sixth Tone app at the App Store or Google Play
APK file for Android:
https://image4.sixthtone.com/pkg/sixthtone.apk
(Copy URL and open in browser)

微信扫码关注该文公众号作者

来源:Sixth Tone

相关新闻

时隔九个月,纽约Electric Zoo音乐节将向购票者退款1/15 国家公园及博物馆免费日:ICA、MFA、Franklin Park Zoo 动物园、加德纳博物馆、Adams公园波士顿大学录取|ZOOMiN让我在思考中进步,成为想成为的人精选MLE岗位丨Apple、Zoox、Barclays公司持续热招!英经济最新利好. 四大银行陷技术故障. Zoopla称房价将继续涨. 45%税率纳税人破百万【求职战报】顶级视频通讯企业Zoom前端软件工程师面试邀约!又反转了!驾照被吊销开车参加Zoom听证爆火 男子再次被捕离谱!美男边开车边参加无证驾驶zoom听证会 法官震惊到无语驾照被吊销男子开车时参加法庭Zoom会议,法官震惊【广州美国中心活动】【Zoom活动】2024征途:大选中的媒体角色,5月22日,星期三,晚上19:00 -20:30【Zoom讲座】媒体多元:亚太群体之声,5月14日,星期二,晚上19:00 -20:30【Zoom活动】网络时代的新闻媒体,5月6日,星期一,晚上19:00 -20:30加州女子在家开Zoom会议遭丈夫枪杀【Zoom活动】气候变化简介:从热浪到全球变暖, 4月21日,星期日,早上10:00-11:30黄学东分享:Zoom AI如何正确地「碾压GPT-4」精选SDE岗位丨Zoom、Amazon、Ciena Corporation等公司开放岗位!外企社招丨ZOOM社招岗位上新!视频会议领域独角兽,月薪20-45k,六险一金,多样福利,适合留学生ZOOMiN会饮阅读会:走进马斯克内心,让我们一起谈谈爱湾区Zoom等科技公司宣布裁员线上|Zoom会议口译JHU录取|在ZOOMiN,“互联网侠女”与她构造的“规则世界”在逐步成型
logo
联系我们隐私协议©2024 bendi.news
Bendi新闻
Bendi.news刊载任何文章,不代表同意其说法或描述,仅为提供更多信息,也不构成任何建议。文章信息的合法性及真实性由其作者负责,与Bendi.news及其运营公司无关。欢迎投稿,如发现稿件侵权,或作者不愿在本网发表文章,请版权拥有者通知本网处理。