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A lion gestures in a cage at Veles, a shelter for wild animals in Rappolovo village outside Saint Petersburg on November 19, 2018. Photo: AFP

Runaway lion, wounded elk, abandoned crocodile all find home at Russian animal shelter

  • ‘Some of the animals were found after accidents, others were abandoned,’ says owner Alexander Fyodorov. ‘Sometimes their stories are like the plot of a film.’
Russia

A lion that escaped from an airport, a crocodile found at a rubbish dump and an elk attacked by stray dogs – all these animals have found refuge in an unusual private shelter in Russia.

Dozens of bears have also passed through the Veles centre, just outside Saint Petersburg, since it was opened in 2009 by businessman Alexander Fyodorov, who says he has spent more than US$1 million on the project.

Alexander Fedorov with a bear in Rappolovo village, outside Saint Petersburg on November 19, 2018. Photo: AFP

“Our aim is to treat wild animals and get them back on their legs again in order to release them if that’s possible,” he said of the centre in Rappolovo, 20km (12 miles) outside Russia’s second city. “Some of the animals were found after accidents, others were abandoned. Sometimes their stories are like the plot of a film.”

One particularly dramatic story is that of a lioness called Elza, who escaped in Saint Petersburg’s Pulkovo airport in December 2017.

A man stands next to a lion in a cage at Veles, a shelter for wild animals in Rappolovo village, outside Saint Petersburg on November 19, 2018. Photo: AFP

“Elza was sent from Grozny by a Chechen businessman to his friend in Saint Petersburg as a new year’s gift,” Fyodorov said. “But the sleeping pills given to the lioness before the trip stopped acting too early. In the airport, the lion broke her cage open and made a run for it.”

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The lion was soon captured and taken to her new owner, but he quickly realised that “it was impossible for him to keep a lion” and took her to the shelter.

A volunteer pushing a wheelbarrow at Veles on November 19, 2018. Photo: AFP

At the time, keeping wild animals at home was not illegal, but a law was recently passed that bans the practice from 2019.

Less is known about the background of the crocodile named Gena who was found at a rubbish dump north of the city.

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Exotic pets has long been fashionable among certain rich or novelty-seeking Russians but often ends unhappily with animals mistreated or escaping.

Moose in their enclosure at Veles on November 19, 2018. Photo: AFP

Other animals came to the shelter after incidents in the wild.

Two years ago, while still a foal, an elk called Alyuminka was badly hurt by stray dogs attacking her. Elks are common in European Russia, living in forests. She now paces the enclosure in Rappolovo.

“Those animals that could not survive in the wild stay here,” said Alexander Teplyakov, a 45-year-old volunteer at the centre.

Volunteers working at Veles on November 19, 2018. Photo: AFP

Four staff and around 10 volunteers work in Rappolovo, where the animals are kept in huge cages or enclosures around a large stone building housing a medical facility.

Despite Russia’s huge size, human activity is increasingly encroaching on the animals’ natural habitat and making it harder for them to survive in the wild.

A brown bear looks out its cage at Veles in Rappolovo village, outside Saint Petersburg on November 19, 2018. Photo: AFP

But the government does little to support them.

“In Russia, you can count centres like this, where there is real help given to wild animals, on the fingers of one hand,” said Svetlana Ilyinskaya, co-director of the Centre for Legal Protection of Animals, a Moscow-based non-governmental organisation.

There are around 50 million abandoned pets in the country – mainly cats and dogs – that breed in the wild as owners often do not sterilise them, she said.

For wild animals, road collisions are a frequent cause of death, with 161 accidents recorded in Russia last year involving large animals – often elks.

Ilyinskaya said “there is no effective plan to help wild animals in need”.

“There are no shelters, nor awareness of what you should do if you find a wounded animal in the wild. There’s also no law that could protect them against industrial development,” she said.

Lion and brown bears in cages at Veles, a shelter for wild animals in Rappolovo village, outside Saint Petersburg on November 19, 2018. Photo: AFP

And for private shelter owners like Fyodorov, the costs are prohibitive.

“I’m not sure how long we can go on,” he said, explaining that profits at his construction business had been hurt by the economic crisis that hit Russia in 2014.

“You can’t predict the future,” he said, admitting that his friends think he is “crazy” for maintaining the shelter.

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