Italy to open Europe’s first marine sanctuary for dolphins

Dolphins swim in the pool of the Dolphins arena of MarineLand theme park in Antibes southeastern France. (AFP)
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Updated 05 December 2025
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Italy to open Europe’s first marine sanctuary for dolphins

  • The site will be ready by the end of this month and the first dolphins are expected to arrive “no later than May or June 2026”

ROME: The Mediterranean’s first sanctuary for dolphins that have lived in captivity will open off Italy next year, as demand for re-homing rises with the closure of marine parks across Europe.
“We must develop a new model for managing dolphins in a natural but supervised environment,” Carmelo Fanizza, head of the San Paolo Dolphin Refuge, told AFP.
Located off the coast of Taranto in the southern Italian region of Puglia, the sanctuary still needs a final green light from the government.
But the site will be ready by the end of this month and the first dolphins are expected to arrive “no later than May or June 2026,” Fanizza said.
Animal rights concerns have driven countries such as Canada and France to ban the capture of dolphins, porpoises and whales, while growing numbers of marine parks are shutting.
That has created a burning question: what to do with the cetaceans, which can live for decades and have mostly only known life in captivity, so cannot be released into the wild?
The San Paolo Dolphin Refuge got permission from the Italian government in 2023 to use a seven-hectare (2.5-acre) area in the Gulf of Taranto, near the island of San Paolo.
The spot is “sheltered and protected from the sea, winds and prevailing ocean currents,” said Fanizza, brushing off concerns the site was near the industrial coastal city of Taranto.
The city is home to one of Europe’s largest steelworks, which has been embroiled in a pollution scandal, but is currently operating at reduced capacity.
“Improvements have been made to the facilities, so that the quality of the breathable air, the water column and the sediments in the area currently pose no risk to animal health,” Fanizza said.

- Sanctuary -

Located around four kilometers (nearly 2.5 miles) off the coast, the facility has a main 1,600-square-meter (17,200-square-foot) enclosure, a smaller one for potential transfers and a veterinary one for quarantine cases.
It has a floating laboratory, accommodation so staff can be on site overnight, and a food preparation area.
It is also equipped with a video surveillance system — both above and under water — as well as a series of sensors at sea, which transmit data to a control room in Taranto.
The sanctuary’s construction has been largely paid for by Jonian Dolphin Conservation — the research organization behind the initiative — with support from private donors and European public funds.
The site’s operating costs are estimated at between 350,000 and 500,000 euros ($408,000 and $584,000) per year.
It could legally accommodate up to 17 dolphins, but “the number will absolutely not be that,” said Fanizza, who stressed the importance of their well-being.
“Our goal at this stage is not to take in a large number of animals but to identify a group that, given its medical condition, behavior and social structure, could be ideal for initiating such a project,” he said.
Muriel Arnal, head of French animal rights group One Voice, which has long campaigned for marine sanctuaries, told AFP that Europe currently has around 60 dolphins in captivity.
“Once you have a model that works well, you can replicate it,” she said, adding that she hoped San Paolo would give a home to French dolphins too.


Russian prosthetics workshops fill up with wounded soldiers

Updated 6 sec ago
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Russian prosthetics workshops fill up with wounded soldiers

Vsevolozhsk, Russia: After losing his right leg on the battlefield in Ukraine, Dmitry, a former fighter with Russia’s Wagner paramilitary group, is walking again thanks to a new prosthetic limb.
With hundreds of thousands of soldiers coming back from the front wounded, Russia’s prosthetics workshops — like the one outside Saint Petersburg where AFP met Dmitry — have been filling up with ex-fighters.
Dmitry, 54, had already fought in Syria and for Moscow-backed separatists in Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region before Russia launched its full-scale offensive in February 2022.
He recalled his injury with a faint smile.
His unit was bombed as it tried to cross the Dnipro river.
The next moment, he saw his right leg lying next to him. Torn off.
“It was my first injury,” said Dmitry, who declined to give his last name and goes by the call sign “Barmak.”
“I was surprised that I fought so long and was constantly lucky.”
He also suffered a serious abdominal injury, spending eight months in hospital and a year in a wheelchair.
“The atmosphere is friendly here, almost soothing,” he said of the private prosthetics workshop in Vsevolozhsk, outside Russia’s second-largest city.
In the small studio, workers in ventilation masks were measuring, buffing and painting artificial limbs as Dmitry had his fitting inspected.

Hefty payments

Russia does not say how many of its soldiers have been killed or wounded in Ukraine — but independent reporting and Western intelligence estimates put it in the several hundreds of thousands.
Government data shows Moscow issued 60,000 more prosthetic limbs in 2024 than in 2021, the last full year before the war — a 65-percent increase.
Even if they don’t disclose how they lost a limb, workshop head Mikhail Moskovtsev told AFP it was “obvious” who the ex-soldiers were among his clients.
“These are specific wounds, for example from mine blasts” — easily distinguishable from the victims of car accidents and extreme sports enthusiasts.
Moskovtsev does not ask questions.
“For me everyone is equal,” he said. “I don’t ask the person where it’s from or the reasons behind it. If they want, they talk on their own.”
His workshop employs around a dozen people.
State-of-the-art prostheses can cost up to five million rubles ($65,000).
Russian veterans can choose between public and private facilities, and are offered a host of rehabilitation programs and cash pay-outs depending on the severity of their wounds.
Dmitry got three million rubles.
“I bought my car with it,” he said, adjusting his prosthetic leg as he climbed into a new black pick-up truck outside the center.
A seasoned soldier, he told AFP he was impressed by the support Moscow offered wounded veterans — contrasting it with a sense of abandonment after the Soviet Union’s war in Afghanistan or the Chechen campaigns of the 1990s and early 2000s.
“I remember very well the return of the veterans of Afghanistan and the famous phrase from the bureaucrats: ‘I’m not the one who sent you there’.
“It was the same with the soldiers of the first and second Chechen wars,” he said.

‘New elite’

The support is just one way Russia has overhauled its economy and geared its entire society to support the offensive on Ukraine.
Lucrative salaries lure men to fight, while President Vladimir Putin wants veterans to take leadership roles, fill up the bureaucracy and form the country’s “new elite.”
Still there are concerns about social problems linked to the thousands of men coming back from the front.
At the workshop near Saint Petersburg was another ex-soldier, also called Dmitry, also with a missing leg.
A drone struck the vehicle he was in while fighting in the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut in 2024.
Asked about why he went to fight, the 42-year-old, known as “Torg” on the battlefield, echoed Kremlin talking points — widely debunked and rejected by Ukraine and NATO — about protecting Russia.
“My main motivation was to make sure that what was happening there stayed there, so that the conflict did not spread to our territory,” he said.
He now sports a jet black prosthetic leg with blood-red curves painted around it.
Both Dmitrys said they had no regrets.
Despite his condition, father-of-two “Torg” said his view on the war had not changed.
“I would do the same again,” he said, without hesitation.