Forced breeding–followed by the disruptions of already severely constricted family bonds as elephants are moved from one tiny, barren zoo exhibit to another to meet zoos’ needs–are among the most morally repugnant aspects of what zoos, under the guidance of the AZA, do to elephants under the pretense that they’re helping them.
We have several important announcements in our fight to
#FreeTheFresnoElephants.
First: Yesterday the Fresno Superior Court denied Amahle, Nolwazi,
and Vusmusi’s habeas corpus petition, which demands their right to
liberty and release to an elephant sanctuary. The Court did so on
the grounds that the petition does not allege, as the Court believes
it must, that the elephants are held in “state custody” (due to, for
example, a prison sentence imposed by a court). We are challenging
this decision and look forward to sharing our next legal steps in
the coming weeks.
Second: As we shared on social media over the weekend, the Fresno
Chaffee Zoo, without any announcement beforehand, transferred
Vusmusi to the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, apparently because they
weren’t successful in their efforts to use him for breeding with
Nolwazi and her daughter Amahle. Upon the recommendation of the
Association of Zoos & Aquariums (AZA), they sent Vusmusi back to San
Diego (where he was born to an elephant who was pregnant with him
when she was imported to the US in 2003) and brought in an elephant
named Mabu, “who has sired many elephant calves,” to breed with
Nolwazi and Amahle, as a spokesperson told The Fresno Bee.
One of the most exploited elephants in US zoos, Mabu was part of a
group of elephants captured from the wild in 2003 that included
Vusmusi’s mother; Mabu has twice been moved back and forth between
the Tucson Reid Park Zoo and the San Diego Zoo Safari Park to be
used for breeding. Nolwazi and Amahle were among 17 elephants, most
of them breeding-age females, who were taken from their natural
habitat in eSwatini in 2016 and imported to US zoos.
If you’re disgusted by the details above, know that we are too.
We’ll be continuing to fight for Vusmusi’s freedom and determining
how best to bring on Mabu as a client.
Forced breeding–followed by the disruptions of already severely
constricted family bonds as elephants are moved from one tiny,
barren zoo exhibit to another to meet zoos’ needs–are among the most
morally repugnant aspects of what zoos, under the guidance of the
AZA, do to elephants under the pretense that they’re helping them.
The truth is they’re all perpetuating a grotesque, unjust, and
archaic system that isn’t saving elephants and that needs to end–in
California and everywhere else.
Right now you can help by sharing this update with your friends and
family along with your thoughts on these developments.
The fight continues.