Dubai Telegraph - Romania sanctuary seeks to save bears as hunting resumes

EUR -
AED 4.308724
AFN 77.53857
ALL 96.624273
AMD 447.449324
ANG 2.100573
AOA 1075.861168
ARS 1684.86077
AUD 1.766091
AWG 2.111833
AZN 1.988896
BAM 1.954268
BBD 2.36005
BDT 143.197773
BGN 1.953631
BHD 0.441754
BIF 3463.356168
BMD 1.173241
BND 1.513301
BOB 8.096654
BRL 6.357821
BSD 1.171782
BTN 105.96795
BWP 15.525832
BYN 3.454393
BYR 22995.513884
BZD 2.356653
CAD 1.615218
CDF 2628.058653
CHF 0.934175
CLF 0.027299
CLP 1070.938431
CNY 8.276619
CNH 8.270131
COP 4461.223553
CRC 586.140628
CUC 1.173241
CUP 31.090873
CVE 110.17865
CZK 24.273936
DJF 208.666463
DKK 7.469236
DOP 74.491619
DZD 151.490982
EGP 55.654426
ERN 17.598608
ETB 183.089309
FJD 2.665371
FKP 0.877875
GBP 0.878183
GEL 3.177275
GGP 0.877875
GHS 13.451458
GIP 0.877875
GMD 85.646688
GNF 10190.926274
GTQ 8.974966
GYD 245.147872
HKD 9.130451
HNL 30.849822
HRK 7.534556
HTG 153.58832
HUF 384.730253
IDR 19546.304125
ILS 3.784774
IMP 0.877875
INR 106.419599
IQD 1534.996987
IRR 49419.822308
ISK 148.384759
JEP 0.877875
JMD 187.612963
JOD 0.831772
JPY 181.906836
KES 151.641831
KGS 102.599728
KHR 4691.283347
KMF 492.162008
KPW 1055.916087
KRW 1726.335387
KWD 0.359835
KYD 0.976535
KZT 611.12105
LAK 25403.09101
LBP 104931.962394
LKR 362.076232
LRD 206.817912
LSL 19.769406
LTL 3.464274
LVL 0.709681
LYD 6.365012
MAD 10.780151
MDL 19.808476
MGA 5190.931747
MKD 61.501538
MMK 2462.943764
MNT 4160.152767
MOP 9.396136
MRU 46.894248
MUR 53.910621
MVR 18.092247
MWK 2031.907547
MXN 21.128747
MYR 4.798387
MZN 74.982124
NAD 19.769406
NGN 1701.257622
NIO 43.125834
NOK 11.885683
NPR 169.54912
NZD 2.030334
OMR 0.449118
PAB 1.171782
PEN 3.945108
PGK 5.050998
PHP 69.34788
PKR 328.388334
PLN 4.222082
PYG 7870.831447
QAR 4.270553
RON 5.091161
RSD 117.287579
RUB 93.312766
RWF 1705.463389
SAR 4.402231
SBD 9.593296
SCR 17.555092
SDG 705.707555
SEK 10.878268
SGD 1.514266
SHP 0.880234
SLE 28.304461
SLL 24602.271054
SOS 668.4761
SRD 45.226102
STD 24283.709675
STN 24.480605
SVC 10.252965
SYP 12972.146962
SZL 19.762512
THB 36.923643
TJS 10.76856
TMT 4.118074
TND 3.425515
TOP 2.824882
TRY 50.099481
TTD 7.951768
TWD 36.702469
TZS 2903.770373
UAH 49.510497
UGX 4164.736
USD 1.173241
UYU 45.983961
UZS 14116.876116
VES 313.771147
VND 30873.23725
VUV 142.111846
WST 3.256309
XAF 655.443314
XAG 0.018645
XAU 0.00027
XCD 3.170741
XCG 2.111845
XDR 0.815161
XOF 655.443314
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.815677
ZAR 19.775323
ZMK 10560.576536
ZMW 27.038809
ZWL 377.782964
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    23.25

    -0.65%

  • BCE

    0.3100

    23.71

    +1.31%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    48.81

    -0.14%

  • NGG

    0.2400

    74.93

    +0.32%

  • BCC

    0.2500

    76.51

    +0.33%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.3

    -0.56%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.7

    -0.15%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.17

    0%

  • AZN

    -0.4600

    89.83

    -0.51%

  • BTI

    -1.2700

    57.1

    -2.22%

  • RIO

    -1.0800

    75.66

    -1.43%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2500

    14.6

    -1.71%

  • RELX

    0.1000

    40.38

    +0.25%

  • BP

    -0.2700

    35.26

    -0.77%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    12.59

    +0.4%

Romania sanctuary seeks to save bears as hunting resumes
Romania sanctuary seeks to save bears as hunting resumes / Photo: Mihai Barbu - AFP

Romania sanctuary seeks to save bears as hunting resumes

At a bear sanctuary in the heart of Romania's Carpathians, several cubs believed to have been orphaned have just arrived.

Text size:

The centre fears more will need shelter now the country has authorised the hunting of this protected species, effectively overturning a ban in place since 2016.

"They come from the forest where their mother was killed," says Florin Ticusan of the Libearty bear sanctuary.

Ticusan and his team care for 128 brown bears at the sanctuary, which says it is the biggest such refuge in the world.

Bears are officially protected in Romania, which the government estimates has 8,000 of them -- the largest population in Europe outside Russia.

But now the European Union country is allowing 481 of the protected animals to be killed this year.

The government argues the bear population is too large and attacks have been increasing.

There was a hunting quota of 220 last year and 140 the year before, but in those instances, the permits came with tight restrictions.

- 'We take everything from them' -

Animal welfare and environment activists have voiced alarm about the soaring quotas.

They say conflicts between people and bears is fuelled by human behaviour but there is a lack of political will to tackle that touchy subject.

Bears are being pushed out of the forest, their natural habitat, because of deforestation and a shortage of their natural food, said sanctuary founder Cristina Lapis.

Romania is a major exporter of the forest berries and mushrooms the animals would usually eat.

"Everything is taken from them and then we wonder why they come down to the city," she said of the bears.

The 69-hectare (170-acre) Libearty centre -- a play on the words "liberty" and "bear" -- opened in Zarnesti in 2005.

With the help of former French film star-turned-animal-rights activist Brigitte Bardot, Lapis and her husband started out rescuing bears kept cooped up in cages, sometimes tiny, to attract customers to petrol stations, restaurants or circuses.

It was impossible to return them to the wild after being kept in captivity and many remain at the sanctuary, often still neurotically pacing in circles near the fences rather than roaming the forest stretching out behind them.

The refuge -- which welcomes 30,000 visitors a year, including school classes -- also takes in bears rescued from zoos in neighbouring war-torn Ukraine, from Albania and Armenia and even from as far afield as the United States.

The centre seeks to educate its visitors about bears' needs and natural behaviour.

They learn, for example, not to entice the animals out of the forests by offering them sandwiches in order to get a few souvenir photos.

This has become a frequent problem on the spectacular Transfagarasan mountain route, where it is not uncommon to come across bears that have become dependent on the unsuitable, easily accessible human food.

"Bears have fundamentally changed their behaviour over the last few years and begging on the road has become their main food source," Environment Minister Mircea Fechet said recently.

Fechet argued the bears posed "an imminent danger to tourists" who approach them and suggested they should be transferred to refuges like Libearty.

The sanctuary believes there are more appropriate solutions to managing the bear population than simply removing them from the wild.

These include putting rubbish bins out of the bears' reach, installing electric fences where required and educating people about how to live together with the animals.

- 8,000 euros per bear -

While it is too early to measure the impact that resuming hunting will have, Lapis is worried it will lead to even more orphaned bears being brought to her centre, which is already struggling to find funds to feed all its residents.

"We don't intend to take in all the bears" still in the wild, she explained.

She said the sanctuary won't place rehabilitated bears back in the forest because the recent culling law meant they just risked becoming "cannon fodder".

Spain's former king Juan Carlos used to come bear hunting in Romania before it was banned.

But recently, AFP found all-inclusive packages for two days' hunting advertised on the Internet.

Ioan Banucu, the head of a company which organises "hunting and shooting holidays in the Romanian wilderness", said he organised expeditions for foreign hunters.

Five bears had been shot dead since October, he said.

"People got excited" about bear hunting, he told AFP.

"But some customers have reservations," he acknowledged without elaborating, adding that interest for other species, like wild boars, was greater.

Bear hunting does not come cheap. It costs up to 8,000 euros ($8,500) per bear, depending on the size.

A.Hussain--DT