Export of 'show' dolphins to Singapore casino is blocked
Welfare campaigners halt 'cruel' trafficking of 25 show animals trained in Philippines
A court has blocked the export of 25 captive dolphins trained in the Philippines to become show animals at a Singapore casino, a Philippine official and animal rights groups said yesterday.
A civil suit filed by the rights groups alleged the traffic in live Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins for sport or entertainment was illegal, cruel and would cause the extinction of the species.
The large marine mammals were shipped to a marine park in the northern Philippines between 2008 and last year, said Anna Cabrera, head of the Philippine Animal Welfare Society.
"The dolphins, caught in the wild from the Solomon Islands, were forcibly snatched from their families and will live short, miserable lives in captivity as show animals for Resorts World in Singapore," Cabrera said.
The Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, the government office in charge of the dolphin permits, would formally respond to the court order on Monday, said bureau director Asis Perez.
He disputed the suit's allegation that dolphin trading would be detrimental to the survival of the species and was not authorised by the Philippines' wildlife conservation law.