ANIMAL RIGHTS WATCH
News, Information, and Knowledge Resources

LIBERATION: Dewa the dolphin, driven ‘psychotic’ by captivity, rescued and freed into the ocean

Dewa can now experience the changing of the tides, the sounds of the sea, see the stars, feel the rain. All of these things he’s been missing for the last 15 years are now available to him.

MICHAEL DAHLSTROM: ‘A captive dolphin displaying behavioural issues has been rescued from a Bali hotel. Video obtained by Yahoo News Australia shows Dewa thrashing about at the edge of the small chlorinated pool where he has been confined in isolation for 15 years. Femke den Haas from Jakarta Animal Aid Network (JAAN) told Yahoo News Australia that the dolphin had been badly affected by his captive conditions. “The pool where Dewa was kept was made of old very sharp ceramics,” she said. “He was filled with scratches and he also showed psychotic behaviour like he was trying to jump out of the pool.”

Ric O’Barry from Dolphin Project worked undercover to observe Dewa and the four other dolphins held at the Melka Excelsior Hotel. “They were bringing in groups from Russia to be healed by these pathetic, sick dolphins who can’t even heal themselves,” he told Yahoo News Australia. “There were a lot of customers from Australia, people who brought their children there to be ‘healed’ by dolphins… Mr O’Barry and Ms den Haas successfully helped remove two of the dolphins, Rocky and Rambo, last August – another died before he could be freed.

Dewa and the remaining dolphin Johnny who is blind, were both missing their teeth and in poor health, so their rescue was put on hold. The two male dolphins were taken out of isolation and placed in a pool together so they could bond. Then, last Tuesday, at 11am Bali time, the trainers entered the pool with Dewa and Johnny for the last time. Mr O’Barry entered the hotel flanked by by the Indonesian department of forestry officials, Dolphin Project volunteers and members of Jakarta Animal Aid Network (JAAN).

The hotel dolphin trainers, made redundant by the raids, were reemployed by Dolphin Project to care for them in retirement. Dewa and Johnny were lifted separately out of the pool, placed into slings, and carried to a waiting truck. With sound the dolphin’s primary sense, everyone laboured in silence, and used hand signals for communication, to lessen the dolphin’s stress.

The two dolphins were trucked across the island for two hours, carried onto the beach and then ferried across the water to a sea pen where they could experience the ocean for the first time in over a decade. Upon release, the dolphins moved to the centre of the pool and clung close to each other.

Mr O’Barry said the Dewa’s aggressive behaviour immediately subsided. “I think we can heal his mental issues at the sanctuary, at least to some degree,” he said. “Dewa can now experience the changing of the tides, the sounds of the sea, see the stars, feel the rain. “All of these things he’s been missing for the last 15 years are now available to him”.’  SOURCE…

RELATED VIDEO:

You might also like