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‘GOD BLESS YOU PLEASE, MRS. ROBINSON’: Animal rights campaigner rescues 101 bears from cruel bile farm in China

The bears had been kept for years crammed into rusty cages with barely enough room to turn round, their gall bladders 'milked' daily for their bile used as a tonic in traditional Chinese medicine.

JOHN INGHAM: Campaigner Jill Robinson has told how she rescued 101 bears from a farm in China where they were subjected to unbelievable cruelty. The animals had been kept for years in a bile farm in southern China, each one crammed into a rusty cage with barely enough room to turn round. They were to have their gall bladders “milked” daily for their bile used as a tonic in traditional Chinese medicine.

But after years of negotiation Jill’s charity, Animals Asia, pulled off what it says is the world’s biggest rescue by any animal welfare group. Between mid April and the end of last month the charity transferred the moon bears in three groups 750 miles from Nanning in Guangxi province to its sanctuary in Chengdu. Each trip took 55 hours, with nine trucks carrying the bears in individual cages. The animals were monitored by vets…

The rescue was welcomed by celebrity supporters who sponsored individual bears… Dame Judi Dench, who named her bear Finty ­after her daughter, said: “Animals Asia have managed to take many moon bears from a bile farm and move them to their sanctuary, where they can live out the rest of their lives, in a way moon bears should, just by being free.”

Comedian Ricky Gervais was thrilled that his bear Derek, who had lost both eyes in captivity, was now in safe hands. He said: “After a year of bad news, here’s some really good news – 101 beautiful moon bears, including my bear Derek, made it into Animals Asia sanctuary, in China, after a 750-mile trip.

In Chengdu, where Animals Asia has created a refuge for bears rescued from bile farms, the newcomers went into 30 days’ quarantine before gradually being released. A video shows a bear called Barack sniff the air as he entered his new home and then walked on grass for the first time in years…

Ryan Marcel Sucaet, of Animals Asia China’s bear and vet team, said: “We’re so proud of how these bears have handled the journey. “Our team did an incredible job of keeping them calm, well-fed, stimulated, and comfortable along the way”… Since its launch in 1998 the charity has rescued more ­ than 600 bears in China and Vietnam where it has another sanctuary. SOURCE…

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