Rescuing the Last Two Animals at the Mosul Zoo
By Robin Wright
Concerned about the fate of
Lula and Simba, residents in Mosul sent frantic Facebook messages to Four Paws
International, an animal-protection agency based in Austria, appealing for
help. In mid-February, the organization dispatched Amir Khalil to Mosul. Khalil
is an Egyptian veterinarian who has spent a quarter century saving animals in
war zones on three continents..
Read on.....
http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/rescuing-the-last-two-animals-at-the-mosul-zoo
By Robin Wright
Mosul’s
forlorn little zoo, a collection of rusted cages in a park near the Tigris
River, was abandoned by its keepers in October, as the Iraqi Army began to
liberate the city from the Islamic State. For three months, the zoo was a
staging ground for isis fighters. More than forty of the zoo animals died,
either as collateral damage—trapped between warring combatants—or from
starvation. By January, when the eastern half of Mosul was freed, only two
animals had survived: Lula, a caramel-colored female bear, and Simba, a
three-year-old lion.
Animals,
like people, suffer from war psychoses, including P.T.S.D. During the most
intense urban combat in history, Lula ate her two cubs from hunger and stress.
Simba had been one of three lions. Simba’s father, weak and emaciated, was
killed by his mate to provide food for herself and Simba. In the wild,
lionesses hunt for the entire pride. She, too, soon succumbed.
Read on.....
http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/rescuing-the-last-two-animals-at-the-mosul-zoo
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