the cruel, dancing bear practice is officially over in Nepal

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Fakhar-i- Abbas

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Jan 2, 2018, 6:30:29 AM1/2/18
to all Foresters

TWO BEARS RESCUED AFTER YEARS OF CRUEL PUNISHMENT AND BEING FORCED TO DANCE

BY JANISSA DELZO 


The last of Nepal’s infamous dancing bears have finally been released from their suffering. During an overnight, collaborative effort of law enforcement, the Jane Goodall Institute Nepal,  19-year-old Rangila and 17-year-old Sridevi—both of whom are sloth bears—were rescued from their owners, according to a statement .

“After a year of tracking them, using our own intelligence and in cooperation with local police, our hard effort and dedication has helped to bring an end to this illegal tradition in Nepal,” Manoj Gautam, the executive director of Jane Goodall Institute Nepal, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) reports.

The tradition of taking bears from the wild and forcing them to dance as a means of entertainment and begging dates back to at least the 19th century. The practice has since stopped in many European and Asian countries, but it still continues in Pakistan, according to National Geographic.


“The sad reality is there are more wild animals suffering across the world just to entertain people,” Gautam told National Geographic. “However, for these two sloth bears at least, a happy ending is finally in sight.”

Dancing bears endure cruel lives of being tortured by their handlers. Rangila and Sridevi both had a hot needle pierced through their noses by their handlers—Mohammad Salman and Mohammad Momtaz—in order to control them. For years, the poor animals were fed a limited diet of only milk and rice. Despite this, they remained in decent health when they were found, National Geographic reports. However, they were visibly traumatized.

“You could clearly see the stereotypic behavior, their psychological trauma. They were sucking their paws, jump up and down on benches,” Gautam said.

It’s unknown exactly what other horrendous acts the animals suffered through, but often, dancing bears are punished by being placed on hot coals, Mary Hutton, founder of Free the Bears, explained to ABC.


The bears are now under temporary care at Parsa National Park in Nepal and will be transported to a permanent home in the near future. Their handlers were not arrested or fined for their actions. Instead, they just received a warning and were forced to sign legal documents citing more serious punishments if they were caught with dancing bears again.


wasim akhtar

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Jan 3, 2018, 12:48:47 AM1/3/18
to all Foresters, Fakhar-i- Abbas
When will Pakistan get rid of this shame?????? 

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Fakhar-i- Abbas

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Jan 3, 2018, 1:15:58 AM1/3/18
to all Foresters, wasim akhtar, Iqbal Mohammad

Dear Iqbal, 

I think they are talking about nepal

Regards

Fakhar




From: Iqbal Mohammad <iqba...@yahoo.com>
Sent: Wednesday, January 3, 2018 6:08 AM
To: all Foresters; Fakhar-i- Abbas; wasim akhtar
Subject: Re: [all-forester] the cruel, dancing bear practice is officially over in Nepal
 
If bear-dancing is such a secret art that they are made to dance in some remotest areas with no access, needing tens of days to reach, a lot of geo-tracking, police help and God knows what, then we must appreciate this effort. But bears are made to dance in the open, in the presence of hundreds of onlookers. So, why should it need such a lot of efforts, is beyond human comprehension.

Iqbal

Iqbal Mohammad

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Jan 3, 2018, 1:31:54 AM1/3/18
to all Foresters, Fakhar-i- Abbas, wasim akhtar
If bear-dancing is such a secret art that they are made to dance in some remotest areas with no access, needing tens of days to reach, a lot of geo-tracking, police help and God knows what, then we must appreciate this effort. But bears are made to dance in the open, in the presence of hundreds of onlookers. So, why should it need such a lot of efforts, is beyond human comprehension.

Iqbal

On Wednesday, 3 January 2018, 10:48:57 am GMT+5, 'wasim akhtar' via all-forester <all-fo...@googlegroups.com> wrote:


Abid Khan

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Jan 4, 2018, 12:07:47 AM1/4/18
to Iqbal Mohammad, all-fo...@googlegroups.com

You all may be aware and pleased to know that the KP Wildlife Deptt banned and controlled this menace about 20 years ago. I thought the Chief Conservator of WL deptt in KP should have volunteered with that information . Maybe he is eithr travelling in far flung areas or overseas ??


AZK 


From: 'Iqbal Mohammad' via all-forester <all-fo...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: 03 January 2018 11:08:32

To: all Foresters; Fakhar-i- Abbas; wasim akhtar
Subject: Re: [all-forester] the cruel, dancing bear practice is officially over in Nepal

israr mohammad khan khawajikzai

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Dec 17, 2019, 3:53:49 AM12/17/19
to all Foresters, Fakhar-i- Abbas, wasim akhtar, Iqbal Mohammad
Dear All


A close group of friends want to register a civil society for the conservation of nature (flora and fauna), conservation of treasure of local cultures, preservation/conservation of indigenous way of life, promoting organic and simple way of life, etc. this organization would be based in the outskirts of Islamabad/Murree.

I want your help to please:

  1. Suggest a suitable thematic name for this CSO;
  2. Suggest other  suitable local, national, Int'l organizations to collaborate with;
  3. Guide for an step-by-step approach to register such an organization;
  4. Any other valuable lead would be highly welcomed.
Looking forward to your kind and early response.

Israr Mohammad Khan


  1. Suggest

From: 'Iqbal Mohammad' via all-forester <all-fo...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Wednesday, January 3, 2018 6:08 AM
To: all Foresters <all-fo...@googlegroups.com>; Fakhar-i- Abbas <fakha...@hotmail.com>; wasim akhtar <wak...@yahoo.com>

Subject: Re: [all-forester] the cruel, dancing bear practice is officially over in Nepal
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