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Annual Review 2007

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IAR News

September 2007

Babu bear is free at last

Babu Bear with brass ring in his muzzleBabu, an Indian dancing bear, has been freed from torture after twelve long years of pain at the hands of Kalandar nomads. Now he and two other rescued bears are safely in the hands of IAR’s partners Wildlife SOS of India.

Babu was poached from the wild as a cub when he was only weeks old and his mother was killed as she tried to protect him. His Kalandar master made a hole in his muzzle with a red hot iron poker and inserted a thick, heavy brass ring the size of a large bracelet through it. Babu’s muzzle was soft and delicate and the weight of the brass ring undoubtedly caused him intense pain. It was this pain that made him jump up and down when his master flicked the rope that was tied to the ring. He looked as though he was dancing, but in fact he was trying to escape the pain in his nose.

News of the plight of the three bears reached Kartick Satyanarayan, Co-founder of Wildlife SOS, and a team was immediately dispatched to help them.

Cutting the ring from Babu Bear’s muzzleThe vets arrived from the Agra Bear Rescue Facility at the centre in Pune, Maharashtra, where Babu and his companions were being housed temporarily. Dr.Ilayaraja and Baiju Raj were part of the team and were shocked to see how the bear had been forced to suffer such pain for so long.

After careful and patient observation of the bear’s behaviour, the Wildlife SOS team anesthetised Babu with a dart. He was soon fast asleep and unable to feel a thing. Cutting the thick heavy ring was quite a task and it had to be done very skillfully so as not to injure the bear. Eventually it was removed and Babu was free. The ring had also caused an infection on the inside of his muzzle that was swollen and filled with pus. He was treated with antibiotics and painkillers.

Dr.Ilayaraja, Wildlife SOS’s Veterinary Officer, said: "It feels so good to be able to relieve this animal of the pain he has suffered silently for so many years."

Babu bear recovering from anaesthesiaBabu bear is soon to be relocated with his two other companions to the Agra Bear Rescue Facility, a landmark collaborative project between WSOS and the State Forest Department which has recently been expanded to 160 acres. The Agra Bear Rescue Facility is primarily funded by International Animal Rescue.

Geeta Seshamani, Co-founder of Wildlife SOS, explained: "The ring to us signifies slavery which the bear has patiently suffered all its life. This freedom from the ring is true freedom from pain and suffering.

"All of us had tears of joy as the ring finally came off. To see the animal being able to breathe normally is such a relief."

Alan Knight OBE, CEO of International Animal Rescue, said, "Nothing can give us more satisfaction and happiness than to see these shy, beautiful bears, who have been much exploited in the brutal dancing bear trade finally getting the freedom they deserve."

The entire procedure was carried out in the Pune Centre where the animals were temporarily housed by the State Forest department. The founder and director of the Centre, Dr. Neelim Kumar Khaire, expressed his happiness in the action taken by Wildlife SOS to relieve the suffering of the bears so swiftly.

< Back to News

August 2008
Volunteer gives glowing report of her time in Goa
Gal Marwitz from Israel has given a glowing account of the time she spent volunteering at IAR’s clinic and rescue centre in Goa.

July 2008
Wildlife traders sent to prison in Indonesia
Following a joint raid earlier this year by the Forestry Department, International Animal Rescue and the Institute of Animal Advocacy (LASA), two traders in Jatinegara market, Jakarta, Indonesia were arrested.

June 2008
Update on IAR’s work in Indonesia
As well as macaques and slow lorises, our team in Indonesia has ended the suffering of a number of endangered Javan gibbons living in misery in a centre known as Cikananga.

June 2008
Goa vets examine hawksbill sea turtle
In June the vets at the International Animal Rescue centre in Goa had an unusual patient in the form of a giant Hawksbill sea turtle.

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