Rescued Ex-Circus Elephant Struggles To Recover
by Cassy Maxton
Posted on December 22, 2003
The newest resident of a Tennessee elephant refuge still faces a serious health
crisis after being rescued by the U.S Department of Agriculture in November.
Dehli, a 57-year-old female Asian elephant, is suffering from severe foot
rot and chemical burns from having formaldehyde poured on her wounds. After
her rescue in November, she was taken to The Elephant Sanctuary in Hohenwald,
TN, a natural-habitat refuge for endangered Asian elephants located about 60
miles from Nashville.
Despite her physical condition, Dehli seems to be in good spirits, according
to sanctuary founder Carol Buckley.
"She is very playful and gentle, but her physical condition doesn't look good
at all. We're giving her antibiotics and pain killers but recovery is unrealistic
because of the advanced condition of the disease," Buckley told a reporter
for Reuters.
"It's obvious she very much wants to live, and that helps," Buckley added.
Foot rot, the leading cause of death among captive elephants, occurs when
the elephant is forced to walk around on concrete.
"Elephants in the wild don't have the foot problems that those in captivity
do," Buckley pointed out in a statement to The Tennessean,
Buckley said The Elephant Sanctuary is now "fighting to save" Dehli.
Caretakers give Dehli medicine in her food daily to help manage her pain. She
will join the nine other elephants in residence at the 2,700-acre sanctuary once
her quarantine concludes.
Captured from the wild as an infant, Dehli had spent her entire life incarcerated
in the circus.
The USDA seized her from an Illinois-based company that leases animals to
circuses. That company now faces allegations of violations of the Animal Welfare
Act.
Sources
The Tennessean
www.tennessean.com/local/archives/03/12/43857780.shtml?Element_ID=43857780
Reuters
www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=3976317 |