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Pop singer Cher pulled into plight of Pakistan’s ‘lonely’ elephant

Music icon backs high-profile rights campaign to find new home and mate for Kaavan the elephant

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Kaavan, the lonely elephant, being fed at his home in Islamabad. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

Pakistan’s lonely elephant Kaavan has become the subject of a high-profile rights campaign backed by music icon Cher, but efforts to improve the pachyderm’s lot appear limited.

The 32-year-old Asian elephant is suffering from “mental illness”, and without a better habitat his future is bleak even if a long-promised new mate finally arrives, experts said.

Outrage over Kaavan’s treatment went global – with a petition garnering over 200,000 signatures – after it emerged he was being chained at the Islamabad Zoo in Pakistan’s leafy capital.

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Kaavan at the Marghazar Zoo in Islamabad. Photo: AFP
Kaavan at the Marghazar Zoo in Islamabad. Photo: AFP

Zoo officials have said this is no longer the case, and that Kaavan just needs a new mate after his previous partner died in 2012.

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But his behaviour – including signs of distress such as bobbing his head repeatedly – demonstrates “a kind of mental illness”, said Safwan Shahab Ahmad, the vice-chairman of Pakistan Wildlife Foundation.

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