Indonesia
Caged Cruelty
Animals have a right to freedom, even if they are in zoos. At an animal park in Java, investigators found an orang utan kept in a concrete cage with garbage inside. In Bali, a pig tailed macaque was kept in a dingy cage with one leg chained to the bars. Three elephants at a zoo in Java were chained by their legs and able to move only one metre in any direction.
These are the horrifying findings of a report of the World Society for the Protection of Animals (wspa). The report "Caged Cruelty
Related Content
- Pulling the plug on fossils in power
- Clean electricity within a generation: Paris-aligned benchmarks for the power sector
- Implementing clean energy transitions: focus on road transport in emerging economies
- Bringing coherence and a rights-based approach to Indonesia’s climate and investment governance
- Landscape of Indonesia power sector finance
- Towards decarbonising transport 2023: a stocktake on sectoral ambition in the G20