Rescued moon bear cubs ‘doing well’ in Laos
text size

Rescued moon bear cubs ‘doing well’ in Laos

16 animals in Luang Prabang sanctuary after being seized from poachers

Two Asiatic Black Bear cubs explore their new quarters at a sanctuary in Luang Prabang, Laos after being kept in cages by poachers for nearly two years. (Image from video by Free the Bears)
Two Asiatic Black Bear cubs explore their new quarters at a sanctuary in Luang Prabang, Laos after being kept in cages by poachers for nearly two years. (Image from video by Free the Bears)

LUANG PRABANG, Laos - Sixteen Asiatic Black Bear cubs rescued from the home of a wildlife poacher in Laos last month are thriving at a sanctuary for the endangered species, where they are being cared for around-the-clock by local and international conservationists.

The sanctuary in Luang Prabang, the ancient capital of Laos, is run by Free the Bears, an Australian wildlife conservation group that works with local communities and governments in Asia to rescue and protect the endangered Asiatic Black Bear, commonly known as the moon bear, and the equally at risk smaller sun bear native to Southeast Asia.

Matt Hunt, the group’s CEO, said the sanctuary was considering expanding its play, housing and veterinary facilities as it has never hosted so many bears, or ones so young, before.

The cubs are now being bottle-fed, and will need to stay in the sanctuary for several months until they are big enough to survive on their own, he added.

The cubs were seen playfully running at the sanctuary and swimming in a small pond.

“It’s probably the single largest-ever rescue of endangered bear cubs worldwide,” he told Reuters.

Lao police rescued the cubs in late March during a raid on a home owned by a Chinese national, Hunt said. The neighbours alerted the police, after hearing the cubs crying. By the time the police were able to extract them, one of the cubs had died, he added.

“They are extremely young, seemingly purchased illegally from hunters across Northern Laos … most likely to try and establish a bear bile farm,” Hunt said.

Bear bile farming involves extracting bile from the gallbladders of living bears for use in traditional Chinese medicine. The practice is legal in China, but outlawed in Laos, Vietnam and Cambodia, among other countries.

Do you like the content of this article?
COMMENT (1)