Love Stronger Than Loss

Image
  Shi Bao’s life was shattered in an instant. A tragic accident took her hind legs, her balance, and any easy future she might have known. Left on the streets, injured and alone, she should not have survived—yet she did. And not just for herself. Even without her back legs, Shi Bao became a mother. She learned to balance on her front legs, dragging her small body forward, never leaving her puppies behind. Each step was pain. Each day was a struggle. But her devotion never wavered. She fed them, protected them, and stayed with them through heat, hunger, and fear. What she lacked in strength, she made up for in love. People who saw her were stunned. Not by tragedy—but by courage. Shi Bao showed that motherhood doesn’t disappear with loss, and that a broken body can still hold an unbreakable heart. Just in time, a British animal charity intervened. Shi Bao and her litter were rescued from the streets and given safety, care, and warmth. Her puppies are now thriving, and Shi Bao is ...

Starving Lions in Sudan Zoo Receive Lifesaving International Aid


 

In this Tuesday, January 21 photo, a malnourished lion rests in a zoo in Khartoum, Sudan. With the staff at the destitute Al-Qurashi Park, as the zoo in Khartoum is known, unable to feed and look after the animals, many have died off or were evacuated, leaving only three skeletal lions. (AP Photo)



Four lions in a rundown zoo in the capital of Sudan, wasting away from hunger, are undergoing lifesaving medical treatment from an international animal rescue organization.



The plight of the rail-thin lions in Al-Qurashi Park in Khartoum set off an outpouring of sympathy and donations from around the world. At least five male and female lions once inhabited the zoo. One lioness died of starvation last week.

On Tuesday, veterinarians and wildlife experts from Vienna-based animal welfare group Four Paws International conducted medical checks at the park, which has fallen on hard times for lack of money and attention.



Amir Khalil, head of the Four Paws emergency mission, said he was “shocked” by the poor state of the lions, their cramped quarters, and the park’s general disarray.

“I don’t understand why no one was given the task of feeding them or how authorities could just overlook this,” he said, describing two of the remaining four as in critical condition, “dehydrated … a third of their normal weight.”

Four Paws faces a daunting task, and challenges from the start have dogged its two-day trip. When the team arrived late Monday, customs agents confiscated most of their luggage and essential medicine, citing a lack of prior approval. The group says it’s operating with just a fraction of its equipment and scrambling to find local alternatives.


Although the group typically carries out rescue missions, it has no immediate plan to transport the animals in Al-Qurashi to better conditions abroad.

The head of the park, Bader el-Deen Wassim, was more optimistic. He said the recent flurry of international attention will allow authorities to “expand and renovate the park” and promised the lions’ health was improving. He expects Sudanese authorities to release the group’s medicine on Wednesday.

But it’s unclear if even that will save the two sickest animals, a lion and a lioness.



“Their muscles are not even able to move,” said Khalil. “I don’t know how we’ll be able to do injections.” The malnourished lions have become something of a symbol of the harsh effects of poverty in Sudan, where runaway price hikes marshaled a popular uprising that ousted longtime autocrat president Omar al-Bashir in April.

Now in a fraught transitional period, Sudan struggles to recover from three decades of corruption, mismanagement, and isolation under al-Bashir. Al-Bashir was convicted of corruption last month and sentenced to two years in a minimum security lock-up, where he awaits trial on separate charges over his role in the killing of protesters during the months before his ouster.

Stiff sanctions, a result of Sudan’s place on the US list of state sponsors of terrorism, have kept the transitional government in limbo, preventing it from seeking debt relief and badly needed foreign investment.
“To see a hungry animal like this, there is no connection to religion or politics,” said Khalil. “It has to do with humanity.”



In this Tuesday, Jan. 21 photo, a malnourished lion rests in a zoo in Khartoum, Sudan. With the staff at the destitute Al-Qurashi Park, as the zoo in Khartoum is known, unable to feed and look after the animals, many have died off or were evacuated, leaving only three skeletal lions.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Lion cub gets taken by a large Crocodile on the Luangwa riverbank! (VIDEO)

A Heartwarming Moment in the Masai Mara: A Baby Lion Calls for His Mom as His Older Cousin Arrives to Play