“Victory” declared the headline on a December 23 news report posted on the Peta Asia website. “Phuket Zoo Is Finally Closing Its Doors.”
Financial troubles brought about by the lack of custom during the Covid-19 pandemic has been the reason given by the owner for closing the zoo, but if the many reports of animal abuse are to be believed, it should have been shut down long ago, for ethical reasons.
Even if you discount the September claim by a John S – his only apparent contribution to TripAdvisor – that he visited the zoo and witnessed a dying monkey being forced to smoke a cigarette, comments from many others on the travel advice website paint a grim picture.
“On 1st steps into this place you are greeted with a sense of despair,” wrote Gretchen Y, in March 2020. “The 5 tigers weren’t drugged however were chained as were the 2 elephants whose daily task was to play soccer for the audience. The staff here were ALL on their asses playing with their phones!!! NO initiative to clean or tidy or give fresh water to animals.”
The damnation continues for page after page: “Crocodiles show was on 2 men dragging them into filthy green water and putting sticks in their mouths forcing their mouths open” (teddyEssex, December 2019);
“I saw a worker punch an orangutan in the back, elephants chained up going crazy, and the worker pinching its ear. Otters barely have any water and it’s SO DIRTY. SICK!!!!!” (Victoria63Travel, July 2019);
“So so disappointed to see the bad conditions the animals live in, with one of my kids so upset that she started to cry!” (Flori G, December 2019).
Even those posters who were not overly concerned about animal welfare were upset by the filth of the place and the cost to enter; 1,500 baht (US$45) for adults and 1,200 baht for children.
The outrage led to the establishment of the Facebook page, Phuket Zoo Thailand – A Place of Misery & Neglect, and the wider world was alerted to the atrocities in April 2018, when images taken by environmental photographer Aaron Gekoski were published by British newspaper The Sun.
The pictures showed injured animals kept in small enclosures and orangutans forced to perform for visitors.
Many of the TripAdvisor posters did like Peta Asia did – the animal rights organisation had been campaigning for improved conditions at Phuket Zoo since 2011 – and called for this “hell on Earth for animals” to be closed for good.
And now it has been. Finally. According to British charity Wild Welfare, the writing was on the wall in April: “The owner, Mr Suriya Tanthaweewong has blamed the economic situation caused by the Covid-19 fallout for the zoo’s inability to keep operating.”
According to Peta, Phuket Zoo’s “elephants will soon be retired to sanctuaries where they will get the care they always deserved”, but as for the other animals, it’s not yet known what will become of them.
Although what could be worse than “hell on Earth”? – SCMP