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Gaza zookeeper fears for abandoned animals after fleeing Rafah

CGTN

00:35

There is a cowshed in Gaza's Khan Younis currently housing dozens of animals including lions and baboons after zookeeper Fathi Ahmed Gomaa transformed into a temporary home having fled with them from Israel's offensive in Rafah. 

"We've moved all the animals we had, except for three big lions that remain in Rafah", he said. "I ran out of time and couldn't move them."

Ahmed was forced to abandon his zoo in Rafah when Israel ordered the evacuation of parts of the southern Gazan city. Before the offensive, the city on the border with Egypt had been spared a ground invasion and more than half of the Gaza Strip's population was sheltering there.

Now, the Israeli offensive has sent more than 800,000 people fleeing from Rafah, according to the UN. Gomaa and his family are among those desperately seeking refuge. 

"I am appealing to the Israeli authorities: these animals have no connection to terrorism," Gomaa said, adding that he wanted their help in coordinating with aid agencies to rescue the lions left behind in Rafah.

One of the lions under threat at Gaza zoo. /Eyad Baba/AFP
One of the lions under threat at Gaza zoo. /Eyad Baba/AFP

One of the lions under threat at Gaza zoo. /Eyad Baba/AFP

They have little chance of surviving on their own. "Of course, within a week or 10 days, if we don't get them out they will die because they'll be left with no food or water," he added.

Gomaa said he had already lost several of his animals to the war, including three lion cubs, five monkeys, a newborn monkey and nine squirrels. Many of Gomaa's birds were released.

"I released some of the dogs, some of the hawks and eagles, some of the pigeons and some of the ornamental birds. I released a lot of them because we didn't have cages to transport them," he said.

Many of the animals had to be released because there was nowhere for them to live at the zoo./ Eyad Baba/AFP
Many of the animals had to be released because there was nowhere for them to live at the zoo./ Eyad Baba/AFP

Many of the animals had to be released because there was nowhere for them to live at the zoo./ Eyad Baba/AFP

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In the cowshed, Gomaa is making do with what he has, using improvized fencing to raise the heights of the pens so their new inhabitants, spotted deer, can't leap out.

Israeli troops began their assault on Rafah on May 7, defying widespread international concern for the safety of the 1.4 million civilians sheltering in the city.

The Gaza war broke out after Hamas's attack on October 7 resulted in the deaths of over 1,170 people, mostly civilians, according to Israeli tallies. Militants also took 252 hostages, 121 of whom remain in Gaza, including 37 the army says are dead.

Israel's retaliatory offensive has killed at least 35,800 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run territory's health ministry.

Gaza zookeeper fears for abandoned animals after fleeing Rafah

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Source(s): AFP
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