Home News & Features Report: Thousands of Elephants Exploited for Tourism Held in Cruel Conditions

Report: Thousands of Elephants Exploited for Tourism Held in Cruel Conditions

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Behind the scenes at an elephant venue in India, which offers tourists rides. The elephants are kept in dark sheds and tied up on concrete flooring. World Animal Protection believes that wildlife should be left in the wild. (PRNewsfoto/World Animal Protection)

NEW YORK—A new report released by international animal welfare organization World Animal Protection reveals that more than three quarters of nearly 3,000 elephants used in tourist entertainment in Asia are kept in severely cruel conditions.

Riding an elephant is one of the most popular tourist activities in Asia. World Animal Protection investigated the conditions endured by 2,923 elephants at tourist venues in Thailand, Sri Lanka, Nepal, India, Laos and Cambodia, and found that 77 percent of them were treated appallingly.

Thailand uses twice as many elephants in tourism as all the other Asian countries combined. Tourism to Thailand doubled from 15.9 million to 32.6 million visitors between 2010 and 2016, contributing to a 30 percent rise (1,688 to 2,198) in elephants held in captivity for tourist activities. The research also found that several venues in Thailand receive thousands of visitors daily, generating estimated profits of tens of thousands of dollars per month from exploiting Asian elephants—an endangered species.

When not giving rides or performing, elephants are typically chained day and night, often to chains less than 10 feet long. They are also fed poor diets, given limited veterinary care, and are frequently kept on concrete floors in stressful locations near loud music, roads or visitor groups.

These conditions do not account for the elephants’ intelligence, behaviors and needs and follow the severe trauma endured by elephants in their early years. This is caused by separation from their mothers and harsh training regimes to break their spirits and make them submissive enough to give rides and perform.

‘Cruel’ Practice Growing

“The cruel trend of elephants used for rides and shows is growing,” said Dr. Jan Schmidt-Burbach, Global Wildlife and Veterinary Advisor at World Animal Protection. “We want tourists to know that many of these elephants are taken from their mothers as babies, forced to endure harsh training, and suffer poor living conditions throughout their life.

“There is an urgent need for tourist education and regulation of wildlife tourist attractions worldwide,” Schmidt-Burbach add. “Venues that offer tourists a chance to watch elephants in genuine sanctuaries are beacons of hope that can encourage the urgently needed shift in the captive elephant tourism industry.”

Since 2005, World Animal Protection has been campaigning to improve the welfare of elephants, and a study on tourist attitudes in 2017 shows a 9 percent drop globally in the number of people who find elephant riding acceptable compared to three years ago.

In 2014, the organization revealed that 53 percent of people globally felt that riding an elephant was acceptable and 40 percent found it unacceptable, compared to 2017, when only 44 percent thought elephant riding was acceptable and 49 percent found it unacceptable.

Most tourists sign up for experiences with elephants because they love wild animals and don’t know about the cruelty behind the rides, tricks and photo opportunities. The best place to see an elephant is in the wild, or in the next best place, a genuine elephant sanctuary. To find out more, read World Animal Protection’s report here.

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