Children’s entertainment: Healthy giraffe shot and fed to lions at Copenhagen Zoo

A child tourist attraction of a different kind was reported at the Copenhagen Zoo in Denmark.

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A child tourist attraction of a different kind was reported at the Copenhagen Zoo in Denmark. While Danish school children took photos or took films from the deadly scene on their smartphones, a 18-month-old perfectly healthy giraffe named Marius was shot in the head on Sunday at Copenhagen Zoo and zoo officials fed the remains to lions and other animals at the zoo.

A Danish zoo has publicly killed and dissected a young giraffe โ€œto avoid inbreedingโ€ and โ€œeducateโ€ children on its anatomy. The move, which came despite a massive petition and several offers to save the animal, has sparked public anger and death threats.

It ended the hopes of more than 27,000 animal lovers who had signed a petition urging the zooโ€™s staff to spare his life.

The reason for the Giraf’s death penalty. His genes were too common to be โ€œincluded in the genetic chain without causing inbreeding problemsโ€ within the European Association of Zoos and Aquaria (EAZA), according to Bengt Holst, the zooโ€™s scientific director.

EAZA supported the zooโ€™s decision in a statement, saying that it is sometimes necessary for some of the animals to be โ€œhumanely euthanizedโ€ in order to ensure a healthy, genetically diverse future population.

However, many questioned if the killing of the giraffe and what followed afterwards could be considered โ€œhumane.โ€ Following the fatal shot, visitors โ€“ including children โ€“ were invited to watch the animal be dissected and skinned. His internal organs were exhibited for about three hours.

The zoo apparently wanted to kill two birds with one stone, as its staff โ€œwould never throw away 200 kilograms of meat,โ€ Holst was quoted as saying. A lethal injection โ€“ which critics say would have been a more humane form of death โ€“ would have spoiled the meat of the animal, he explained.

Moreover, Holst rejected the notion that any of the children were unsettled by the carnage, saying that they instead were โ€œvery enthusiasticโ€ and โ€œfascinatedโ€ by the process. Some photos from the scene indeed showed several children filming the dissected animal on their smartphones.

Iโ€™m actually proud because I think we have given children a huge understanding of the anatomy of a giraffe that they wouldnโ€™t have had from watching a giraffe in a photo,โ€ zoo spokesman Tobias Stenbaek Bro told AP.

The action was, however, branded a cheap โ€œPR stuntโ€ on the part of zoo officials by those protesting the killing of the young animal. Media exploded with outraged comments which were fueled by Holstโ€™s remarks that he never considered canceling the killing โ€œbecause of some emotional events happening around us.โ€

What surprised and angered the public was the fact that Copenhagen Zoo did not consider transferring the animal to other zoos for the same โ€œin-breedingโ€ reasons, and ignored a 50,000 euro (US$68,220) offer from Britainโ€™s Yorkshire Wildlife Park, which wanted to rehouse Marius.

Copenhagen Zoo officials insisted that the other options would have been โ€œworseโ€ for the giraffe. Contraceptives, for instance, would have affected its health and would have contributed to โ€œpoorer animal welfare,โ€ they maintained.

But the 150-year-old Moscow Zoo issued a statement saying that the killing of Marius was โ€œunjustified cruelty.โ€ While also being a member of the EAZA, the zoo stressed that it is cruel to have baby animals born and raised only to be euthanized.

โ€œThere are more humane ways, but they are more costly. Moscow Zoo strives not to breed animals if there are no means of maintaining them or transferring them to other zoos. While we all love the little ones, sometimes we have to sterilize the animals and keep them separated. Moreover, we do not consider it is possible to kill an animal only because it has become old,โ€ the statement said.
Protests and death threats
Meanwhile, thousands of activists โ€“ including a small group which took to the streets to protest the killing of Marius โ€“ have lashed out at the zooโ€™s stance and flooded its Facebook page with outraged comments.

But the widespread anger did not end there โ€“ Danish zoo officials began receiving calls and messages containing death threats.

Stine Jensen from Denmarkโ€™s Organization Against the Suffering of Animals said โ€œit shows that a zoo is not the ethical institution that it wants to portray itself as being, because here you have a waste product โ€“ that being Marius.โ€

Animal Rights Sweden added that it is โ€œno secretโ€ that animals are routinely euthanized in zoos when there is no longer space or if the newbornโ€™s genes are not โ€œinteresting enough.โ€

โ€œWhen the cute animal babies that attract visitors grow up, they are not as interesting anymore,โ€ the group said in statement, adding that the only way to end the practice is to stop visiting zoos.

WHAT TO TAKE AWAY FROM THIS ARTICLE:

  • While Danish school children took photos or took films from the deadly scene on their smartphones, a 18-month-old perfectly healthy giraffe named Marius was shot in the head on Sunday at Copenhagen Zoo and zoo officials fed the remains to lions and other animals at the zoo.
  • I'm actually proud because I think we have given children a huge understanding of the anatomy of a giraffe that they wouldn't have had from watching a giraffe in a photo,โ€ zoo spokesman Tobias Stenbaek Bro told AP.
  • EAZA supported the zoo's decision in a statement, saying that it is sometimes necessary for some of the animals to be โ€œhumanely euthanizedโ€ in order to ensure a healthy, genetically diverse future population.

About the author

Avatar of Linda Hohnholz

Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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