FOUR PAWS rescued Kaavan in 2020 and flew him to Cambodia in “heaviest” mission yet.

Siem Reap/Vienna, 24 August 2022 – It has been almost two years since
Kaavan, the “loneliest elephant in the world” made headlines all across the
globe. In a spectacular effort, global animal welfare organisation FOUR PAWS
rescued the 38-year-old elephant from a run-down zoo in Pakistan and
relocated him to Cambodia Wildlife Sanctuary for elephants in December 2020.
On 22 August, Kaavan’s rescuers from FOUR PAWS paid him the first visit
since his arrival in Cambodia and were welcomed like old friends – with a
raised elephant´s trunk. Veterinarian Dr Amir Khalil spent weeks with Kaavan
in 2020, preparing him for the super-size plane transfer, and forming a bond
with the elephant. Since then, Kaavan has regained his natural behaviours
and lives near other elephants in a spacious jungle enclosure. Gone are the
sad and lonely days from his past.
FOUR PAWS veterinarian Dr Amir Khalil, who has led FOUR PAWS “heaviest”
animal rescue mission so far: “Rescuing Kaavan back in 2020 has been one of
the most memorable moments of my entire life. Before coming here today I
often thought how Kaavan would react when he sees me. When I approached I
could tell, that he is doing so much better than when we have last met, 18
months ago. Kaavan looked me in the eyes, and then suddenly, he raised his
trunk as if to greet an old friend. I could not help but singing to him the
same song I had sung before I left back then, My way by Frank Sinatra.”
“It’s great to see Kaavan doing so well. Everyone who contributed can be
proud of having secured a good life for him. However, a lot remains to be
done for other animals in captivity. FOUR PAWS will keep up the direct work
for animals in need. We will also keep up the policy work on the ground. The
connection between policy decisions, animal welfare and human lives needs to
be pointed out over and over.”
~ Josef Pfabigan, CEO of global animal welfare organisation FOUR PAWS
An extraordinary elephant rescue
Kaavan came to Pakistan as a gift from Sri Lanka in 1985. From 1990 on, he
lived with his partner Saheli, but since her death in 2012, Kaavan lived a
lonely existence as the last Asian elephant in captivity in Pakistan. In May
2020, the Islamabad High Court decided that all animals living in Islamabad
Zoo had to be relocated to sanctuaries, leading not only to the rescue of
Kaavan but 38 other animals that FOUR PAWS relocated to species-appropriate
new homes.
To prepare Kaavan’s historic transfer, the FOUR PAWS team practised with him
the safe and stress-free entry and exit into and from the transport crate.
Dr Khalil also used creative methods to keep Kaavan calm by serenading the
elephant with Frank Sinatra’s ‘My Way’. Worldwide, only a handful of adult
elephants have been relocated by plane. For FOUR PAWS it was the first
elephant air transfer.
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