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Australian youths maul 75 year old flamingo
Four men aged between 17 and 19 were charged with aggravated ill-treatment of an almost blind 75 year old greater flamingo at Adelaide Zoo. "The flamingo's head and beak were injured and it was bleeding from an eye." The attackers of the tame and docile flamingo have been released on bail and asked to appear in court at a later date. The Australian public has expressed outraged over this most awful attack.
Four Australian teenagers have been charged with an attack on an almost blind greater flamingo, thought to be one of the oldest of its kind alive. Police and zoo officials said the flamingo's head and beak were injured and it was bleeding from an eye.The bird, aged at least 75 years, is in a critical condition, zoo staff said. The bird has been at the zoo for most of its life and, with its Chilean partner, has been one of Adelaide zoo's most popular exhibits. Police said four men aged between 17 and 19 were charged with aggravated ill-treatment of an animal and released on bail to appear in court at a later date. Several visitors at the zoo at the time of the attack had spoken about the incident with zoo staff and officers wanted to interview them, a spokesman said. The injured bird, described as tame and docile, was sedated after the attack and taken to a local veterinary clinic where its condition was reported to have improved overnight. The exact age of the flamingo remains unknown, as proper records from his arrival in the 1930s do not exist. "The bird arrived at the zoo in 1933 and was a mature bird at that stage," a spokeswoman for the zoo told Agence France Presse. "So although we don't know its exact age it is at least 75 years old - much older than they grow in the wild," the spokeswoman said. "Although undoubtedly the oldest flamingo in the world its quality of life is very good," the zoo's website says. Public outrage: Zoo bird keeper Vaughan Wilson was quoted as saying the birds had been popular partly because they were accessible to the public. But he said the knee-high fence separating the flamingos from the crowd had always caused concern.
Australian newspapers reported that the attack had caused public outrage and that radio talk shows were overwhelmed by calls. Adelaide zoo has had its share of brutal incidents before: in 1985, two men broke in and killed 64 animals. In November 2006, a pair of valuable African grey parrots was stolen, seven months after the theft of a baby meerkat called Wanda. A rare squirrel monkey was also taken in 2004.




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (8)
at 06:43 on October 30th, 2008
This is so sad I want to kill those guys!
at 17:01 on October 30th, 2008
This is a sick story, those teens should get more than a slap on the wrist. But at the same time, it's sad to see the public outcry for one flamingo while, for the most part, societies remain silent while millions of unborn human babies are being murdered in the womb.
at 17:02 on October 30th, 2008
This is a sick story, those teens should get more than a slap on the wrist. But at the same time, it's sad to see the public outcry for one flamingo while, for the most part, societies remain silent while millions of unborn human babies are being murdered in the womb.
at 15:14 on November 2nd, 2008
This is outrageous. These criminals should be given the highest sentence possible. I don't even think bail should have been permitted, and I think the two minors should be tried as adults, with permanent records. This zoo should also upgrade its security. Obviously, incidents have occurred in the past-- injured, stolen, missing animals...something is wrong. They should ensure that the safety of all the animals is utmost. Too many incidents at the same facility, now this!?! It's nice to be close to the animals, and to allow them to interract with the public, but not at the animal's expense. Upgrade the security!
at 01:43 on November 3rd, 2008
Being a south Australian I think we should be able to beat those teenagers into the condition that the poor flamingo is in. I hope that they rot in prison. We need to bring in capitol punishment!!!
at 07:49 on January 13th, 2009
how could somebody hurt a poor flamingo?! I mean this bird is probably the same age as their grandparents-would they do what they did to that poor bird as they did to their gandpartents?!! I think they deserve more than a telling off-or a slap on the wrist. Theu should really have an additude adjustment- they should be put through at least a little bit of what that poor bird has been put though. h and they should be banned form that zoo and all other zoos in the vacinity.
at 07:51 on January 13th, 2009
*grandparents?!!.....
**Oh and they.....
at 07:52 on January 13th, 2009
*grandparents?!!......
** Oh and they............