Peshawar zoo faces outcry over animal deaths

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Pervaiz Khattak, queing for entry ticket at Peshawar Zoo. (Photo courtesy: Peshawar Zoo)
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Former Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Pervaiz Khattak visiting Peshawar Zoo, which opened in February. (Photo courtesy: Peshawar Zoo)
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Three pairs of Bengal tigers joined the zoo population this week. (Photo courtesy: Peshawar Zoo)
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Peshawar zoo is home to three giraffes. (Photo courtesy: Peshawar Zoo)
Updated 05 July 2018
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Peshawar zoo faces outcry over animal deaths

  • Pakistanis across the country have joined Peshawar residents in demanding the zoo be shut down

ISLAMABAD: Four months after opening, Peshawar city’s first zoo is facing demands that it be shut down because conditions for its animals are substandard.

More than 40 animals, including 30 birds, a fallow dear, a monkey, an antelope and a snow leopard, have died at the zoo since its opening in February.
The zoo welcomed another three pairs of Bengal tigers last week amid the outcry.
Most of the animals died from respiratory illnesses, although the monkey was fatally injured by a wolf kept in the same cage.
Pakistanis across the country have joined Peshawar residents in demanding the zoo be shut down.
A Twitter campaign under the hashtag #ShutDownPeshawarZoo is giving animal-lovers a platform to voice their concern.
However, Mohammed Ali, the zoo’s director, said that steps are being taken to improve the situation.
“Only a few animals have died in Peshawar zoo, while in advanced zoos abroad, including those in the UK, the animal mortality rate has been recorded in hundreds,” he said.
Ali said the zoo was understaffed and its management was working to ensure animals received proper care.
“Steps have been taken to address the issue of animal care,” said Ali.
“We are focusing on improving the established animal habitats at the zoo to match them with their natural environment. We are also paying more attention to monitoring the animals and ensuring efficient coordination with zoo staff,” he said.
Ali said he was unaware of the hashtag campaign on Twitter and was optimistic for the future.
“The zoo continues to improve with every day. We hope to meets the standards of other such facilities in Pakistan,” he said.
“Peshawar is playing a positive role in the conservation of wildlife and education of the public through this zoo,” he said.


Animated Saudi film screens at Red Sea International Film Festival 

Updated 10 December 2025
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Animated Saudi film screens at Red Sea International Film Festival 

RIYADH: It is life imitating art — and art imitating life: a story about work burnout created work burnout, but for Saudi filmmaker Rwad Khalid, every sleepless night paid off. 

Arab News spoke with Khalid, who joked about the literal and metaphorical Mary Poppins-like bag she always carries. In real life, she hauls cameras and “other things” everywhere.

Her dedication to her craft has paid off — Khalid's seven-minute fantasy-drama-comedy animation, “Business Bag,” will be screened at the Red Sea International Film Festival in her home country.

A 2025 graduate of Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University in Riyadh with a degree in film and animation, she is passionate about crafting Saudi-centric stories that explore universal social themes through animation.

The film is produced by fellow classmates Linah Alqudari, Manar Alzahrani, and Dana Al-Omran, as part of their graduation project. Each brought their own distinct animation style, and the four of them worked together to weave a cohesive final look. Khalid and Alqudari wrote the script.

Her team unexpectedly became experts in the legal world when they tried to secure the copyright to vintage Japanese music from a deceased singer to use in their film. Determined not to take money from their families, they pooled their own savings and university allowances to fund the project.

“Business Bag” follows a young man overworked and over-caffeinated, drowning in office work pressure and routine — until, on a short walk outside the office, his bag suddenly flies away in the dead of night. As he chases it across Riyadh, he rediscovers the city’s beauty and learns to rebalance his life.

Work-related burnout is universal, the team determined, which is why the film barely uses dialogue. Instead, it leans on music and street sounds of bustling Riyadh.

The entire animation process was swift. 

“Other animators would tell me, like, ‘No way — it’s crazy. You did this in only two months? That’s impossible,’” Khalid said. “But it was possible, after all.”

Khalid said many people have asked why the main character is a man, given that the film was created by a team of women. 

“I knew I wanted Riyadh to be a main character. I also knew I wanted it to take place at night. Logically, I wouldn’t place a woman in that space in Riyadh at night,” she said. 

 “Let the boy suffer,” she added with a laugh.