FOUR PAWS transfers four rescued tigers to LIONSROCK Big Cat Sanctuary. The Bengal Tigers had spent 15 years in a train carriage!
Watch their first moments stepping onto grass! on youtube.
Four Bengal tigers – the former ‘train tigers’ – who spent over 15
years stuck in a train carriage in San Luis province in Argentina,
have arrived at their new home at
LIONSROCK Big Cat Sanctuary in South Africa on 12
March. Global animal welfare organisation FOUR PAWS rescued the
tigers from their long confinement after weeks of tireless efforts
and close cooperation with the Argentinian and South African
authorities, and transferred them to its species-appropriate big cat
sanctuary.
Getting the tigers out of the train carriage, into the transport
crates and on a truck to the airport, was a logistical challenge
that the experienced team mastered without complications. Now
Sandro, Mafalda, Messi and Gustavo have arrived well at their new
forever home after a journey of over 70 hours. The experienced team
at LIONSROCK will make sure they can relax and adjust to the new
surroundings. This marks the first rescue mission FOUR PAWS
conducted in South America.
After a FOUR PAWS team of veterinarians and wildlife experts spent
weeks on-site to prepare the tigers with positive reinforcement, so
the transfer would be as safe and smooth as possible not only for
the animals but also from a logistics side, all four tigers have
arrived well in South Africa. While Mafalda took a little time
before she left her transport crate, Sandro, Messi and Gustavo
started to explore the new surroundings almost immediately.
“These tigers have never felt grass or earth under their paws. It’s
the first time they can see the sky above them, not just metal bars
and a roof. Now they have hundreds of square meters full of new
feelings, tastes and smells. It is overwhelming for them to be in a
completely new environment but animals are quick at adapting to
better living conditions. They were already curious, exploring their
temporary adaption enclosures and making careful first steps on the
so far unfamiliar ground. I am proud that we have brought all four
tigers safely to South Africa. Now the mission is complete and I am
handing them over into the care of my colleagues at LIONSROCK,”
says FOUR PAWS veterinarian Dr Amir Khalil, who led the rescue
mission and transfer of the tigers to South Africa.
“The road to rehabilitation for these animals now begins,” says
Hildegard Pirker, who manages LIONSROCK Big Cat Sanctuary. “In the
coming days and weeks, LIONSROCK will closely monitor the four
tigers' medical needs and determine the veterinary care they need.”
FOUR PAWS cares for rescued big cats in a species-appropriate
environment at LIONSROCK Big Cat Sanctuary, yet many other big cats
around the world face a tragic fate. Pirker continues, "The
exploitation of big cats for commercial gain fuels an industry that
could lead to the future of the species being behind bars.”
LIONSROCK Big Cat Sanctuary, one of eleven wild animal sanctuaries
established by FOUR PAWS, near Bethlehem, South Africa is home to
over 100 animals, most of which are big cats rescued by FOUR PAWS
from war-ravaged zoos, circuses, private ownership, and the canned
hunting industry. The sanctuary provides a species-appropriate,
lifelong home for the mistreated big cats who cannot be released
back into the wild.
The habitat offers highest standards including large areas for
family groups, facilitation of natural behaviour through enrichment
and highest standards of medical care as well as highest security
standards of enclosures. In LIONSROCK hunting, trading or breeding
of big cats is strictly prohibited. Moreover, interactions between
wild animals and visitors are prohibited as well.
FOUR PAWS is the global animal welfare organisation for animals
under direct human influence, which reveals suffering, rescues
animals in need and protects them. Founded in 1988 in Vienna by Heli
Dungler and friends, the organisation advocates for a world where
humans treat animals with respect, empathy and understanding. The
sustainable campaigns and projects of FOUR PAWS focus on companion
animals including stray dogs and cats, farm animals and wild animals
– such as bears, big cats and orangutans – kept in inappropriate
conditions as well as in disaster and conflict zones. With offices
in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Germany, Kosovo, the
Netherlands, Switzerland, South Africa, Thailand, Ukraine, the UK,
the USA and Vietnam as well as sanctuaries for rescued animals in
eleven countries, FOUR PAWS provides rapid help and long-term
solutions. www.four-paws.org