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World Animal Protection

Together with World Animal Protection we are helping move the world to protect animals! Elephants and other wild animals used for entertainment suffer every day of their long lives. They desperately need you to stand by their side and protect them from cruelty, pain and exploitation. $30 every month could help keep wild animals in…

Elephant

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Together with World Animal Protection we are helping move the world to protect animals!

Elephants and other wild animals used for entertainment suffer every day of their long lives. They desperately need you to stand by their side and protect them from cruelty, pain and exploitation.

$30 every month could help keep wild animals in the wild where they belong free from harm and suffering.

Wild animals are captured, taken from their natural habitats or bred in captivity, suffering a lifetime of cruelty and abuse. Some are beaten into submission, deprived of food and water or trapped in concrete cages – all for the tourist dollar.

We know the vast majority of travellers visit wildlife venues because they love animals. They do not want to contribute to cruel wildlife tourism. However, cruelty in these venues is not always easy to spot. Here’s a list of five things to avoid on your next holiday if you want to be an animal friendly traveller.

Five things to avoid on your next holiday:

1. Never get a selfie with a wild animal. If you’re able to hold, touch, or kiss that animal, the chances are it has suffered. Wild animals are not domesticated. If you can ‘cuddle’ or sit beside a tiger, know that it has been abused and potentially drugged so you can have that experience.

2. Don’t support attractions that force wild animals to perform tricks and shows. Avoid watching dolphin shows, dancing bears, and performing monkeys. Wild animals are not entertainers.

3. Don’t get taken for a ride. Elephants are wild animals and before they will tolerate a human sitting on their back, they are put through a cruel and inhumane breaking in process known as ‘the crush.’ They are physically beaten and their spirit is broken. This process lasts between a few weeks to a few months but the physical and psychological trauma lasts a lifetime.

4. Avoid paying to see fights between animals. Walk away from bullfights, cockfights, crocodile wrestling, and bear baiting. Paying for these cruel performances increases demand and confines these animals to a lifetime of abuse and injury.

5. Say no thanks to local dishes which are preceded by extreme animal cruelty, such as shark fin soup, bush meat, dog meat, frog legs, foie gras or tiger wine.

Donate Now!

www.worldanimalprotection.org.au

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