STREET ELEPHANTS in Thailand
Any charity involved with the conservation and welfare of Asian elephants has to recognise the importance of the issue of street elephants. The plight of elephants forced to live and work in urban areas is one in which EleAid has been involved since our inception. We first became involved in the issue with our 2003 Bring the Elephants Home Campaign and as a result our first three elephants were all rescued from suffering on city streets
What is a Street Elephant?
Street elephants are forced by their owners to live and work in an urban environment. The owner or handler makes money by forcing the elephants to perform tricks for people’s entertainment. They also sell over priced bananas or other fruit to passers by so they may feed the animals.
Often, but not always, the targets for the street-begging mahouts are western tourists. The exotic sight of an elephant in a city environment is beguiling to people on holiday and they are often ready to spend a few pounds to interact with elephants. However most of them are completely unaware of the depths of the suffering of these unfortunate animals. Street elephants are particularly common in
Why do the Elephants Work the Streets?
The mahouts work the streets for money, but behind this simple answer there are a number of far more complicated factors.
Domesticated elephants have been used for work in
In
On the other hand, richer and more unscrupulous criminal elements have been buying up high numbers of elephants and renting them out to people who will take them into the cities. They are using the suffering of these mighty animals to line their pockets.
What Problems do the Elephants Suffer?
Elephants are not designed for the urban jungle. These are just some of the appalling ways that street elephants suffer:
Feet -
Sunstroke and Dehydration – As previously stated, during the day most city elephants hide on wasteland. Often there is no shade for the elephants and they are left unprotected from the ravages of the sun. We have seen the most appalling sunburn on street elephants who are in absolute agony as the skin peels from their backs.
Often they also have inadequate water supplies. They have to rely on their mahouts to bring them water in buckets. This is however hard arduous work and only the most dedicated mahout will bring the 60 gallons a day that the elephant needs.
We found the elephant pictured in
Gastric and Respiratory Problems – These are both very common in city elephants. Elephants have sensitive stomachs yet most of the diet of a street elephant is contaminated by pollution, pesticides or both.
Similarly the air the elephants breathe is choked by pollution and exhaust fumes. For an animal designed to live in a natural environment, the ravages of pollution can play havoc with an elephant’s respiration.
Traffic and other accidents– Motor vehicles are a major danger. In 2002, a Thai government minister stated that up 20 elephants a month were involved in traffic accidents. EleAid’s Max is a perfect example of how a traffic accident can leave a street- walking elephant crippled for life.
There are also many other hazards in the city that can cause elephants to have accidents when they are out of a familiar environment. In 1987 an elephant called Boon Choo fell into an open sewer and died in
Cruelty and Drugs – Elephants suffering from any of the problems listed above are unlikely to be the most cooperative of animals when it comes to performing tricks and meeting the general public. Disorientated by a myriad of health problems and forced into the noisy entertainment areas with booming music and confusing neon lights, the elephants can be difficult to control. To keep them in line, the mahouts are often brutal with their discipline and many elephants endure shocking physical abuse with the ankush.
The animals also suffer from extreme fatigue and to combat the tiredness it is commonplace for mahouts to drug the elephants with amphetamines to keep them on the move. EleAid has observed many street elephants with cloudy, dead eyes which is the classic symptom of drugging.
Solutions?
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To be truly effective, any solution must be holistic and comprehensive rather than relying on occasional purges and ad hoc involvement. Firstly an alternative means of earning a living must be made available to the elephants and their keepers. Whether it is working in the tourist business or with the forestry commission patrols, there must be an incentive for the mahouts to remove their elephants from the streets.
This should be coupled with a corresponding increase in the severity of the penalties for taking elephants back into urban areas. Currently the fines for an elephant in the city are often laughably small and can be made back with a few hours of begging. This needs to be dramatically increased. the refusal to pay fines should lead to the forfeiture of the elephant.
Thirdly, enforcement should be dramatically improved. Specialist elephant teams should be set up in cities with an elephant problem and they should be given the resources necessary to carry out the job effectively. Potentially they could operate in tandem with NGO’s who could provide the elephant handling skills.
EleAid strongly advocates the adoption of the above measure for dealing with the problem of street elephants. However it requires real commitment on behalf of city government and other authorities to see them implemented. In the meantime, we urge the public and tourists who encounter street elephants to refrain from handing money to the mahouts. Of course the natural reaction on being confronted by a street elephant is to feed them. However these well intentioned actions merely serve to perpetuate the problem
Source: http://www.eleaid.com/index.php?page=streetelephants
some photos will be published at: http://www.costabravapropertyservices.com/blogs
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