Lonely no more: Kaavan the elephant from Pakistan makes new friend

Newly-arrived Asian elephant Kaavan, who was flown from Pakistan, is seen in his new enclosure at the Kulen Prom Tep Wildlife Sanctuary in Cambodia's Oddar Meanchey province on December 1, 2020. (AFP)
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Updated 01 December 2020
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Lonely no more: Kaavan the elephant from Pakistan makes new friend

  • Reaching out with his trunk, Kaavan greeted a fellow inhabitant at Cambodian sanctuary where he is beginning his new life
  • The 36-year-old elephant — dubbed the “world’s loneliest” — was the sole Asian elephant at Islamabad’s dilapidated zoo

Oddar Meanchey, Cambodia: It was his first contact with another elephant in eight years.
Reaching out with his trunk, Kaavan tentatively greeted a fellow inhabitant of the Cambodian sanctuary where he is beginning his new life after being rescued from grim conditions in a Pakistani zoo.
The 36-year-old bull elephant — dubbed the “world’s loneliest” — was the sole Asian elephant at Islamabad’s dilapidated zoo. Animal rights groups launched a campaign to save him from the substandard conditions there, boosted by spirited social media support from US actress and musician Cher.
He arrived in Cambodia on Monday to much fanfare — including a welcome from Cher herself, who not only traveled to see him off from Pakistan, but also arrived ahead of him at Siem Reap airport.
Tuesday saw Kaavan settling into his enclosure at Kulen Prom Tep Wildlife Sanctuary, where he was seen touching trunks with another elephant, captured in images provided by rights group Four Paws.




This handout photo taken and released on December 1, 2020 by the Cambodia Wildlife Sanctuary shows newly arrived Asian elephant Kaavan (L) touching trunks with another elephant in his new enclosure at the Kulen Prom Tep Wildlife Sanctuary in Cambodia's Oddar Meanchey province. (AFP)

“First contact with an elephant in eight years — this is a huge moment for Kaavan,” said Martin Bauer, a spokesman with the Austria-based group that worked for months to get him ready for the flight.
“Kaavan will finally have the chance to live a species-appropriate and peaceful life,” Bauer said, adding that the entire team was extremely moved to witness the interaction.
“He has a very bright future ahead of him.”
Once Kaavan has adjusted to a “controlled setting,” he will be released into the wider sanctuary, where there are three female elephants, an environment ministry official said on Monday.
The plan is to breed Kaavan with local elephants to “conserve the genetic fold.”
Transporting an adult elephant by plane is no small task, and has only been undertaken a handful of times.
Helpers packed his trunk with 200 kilograms (450 pounds) of food to snack on during the seven-hour flight aboard a jumbo Russian cargo plane. A tube system was installed in his transport crate to handle up to 200 liters (58 gallons) of urine.
Activists have accused the zoo in Islamabad of chaining Kaavan up, and of not properly sheltering him during the searing summers there.
Conditions were so bad that in May, a judge ruled that all the zoo’s animals should be relocated.


Peshawar church attack haunts Christians at Christmas

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Peshawar church attack haunts Christians at Christmas

  • The 2013 suicide attack at All Saints Church killed 113 worshippers, leaving lasting scars on survivors
  • Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif vowed to protect religious minorities on Christmas, act against any injustice

PESHAWAR: After passing multiple checkpoints under the watchful eyes of snipers stationed overhead, hundreds of Christians gathered for a Christmas mass in northwest Pakistan 12 years after suicide bombers killed dozens of worshippers.

The impact of metal shards remain etched on a wall next to a memorial bearing the names of those killed at All Saints Church in Peshawar, in the violence-wracked province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

“Even today, when I recall that day 12 years ago, my soul trembles,” Natasha Zulfiqar, a 30-year-old housewife who was wounded in the attack along with her parents, told AFP on Thursday.

Her right wrist still bears the scar.

A militant group claimed responsibility for the attack on September 22, 2013, when 113 people were killed, according to a church toll.

“There was blood everywhere. The church lawn was covered with bodies,” Zulfiqar said.

Christians make up less than two percent of Pakistan’s 240 million people and have long faced discrimination in the conservative Muslim country, often sidelined into low-paying jobs and sometimes the target of blasphemy charges.

Along with other religious minorities, the community has often been targeted by militants over the years.

Today, a wall clock inside All Saints giving the time of the blast as 11:43 am is preserved in its damaged state, its glass shattered.

“The blast was so powerful that its marks are still visible on this wall — and those marks are not only on the wall, but they are also etched into our hearts as well,” said Emmanuel Ghori, a caretaker at the church.

Addressing a Christmas ceremony in the capital Islamabad, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif vowed to protect religious minorities.

“I want to make it clear that if any injustice is done to any member of a minority, the law will respond with full force,” he said.

For Azzeka Victor Sadiq, whose father was killed and mother wounded in the blasts, “The intensity of the grief can never truly fade.”

“Whenever I come to the church, the entire incident replays itself before my eyes,” the 38-year-old teacher told AFP.