A batch of animals with an estimated value of nearly 1 million yuan (US$120,500) will be sent by two Chinese organizations to Afghanistan's Kabul Zoo as symbols of friendship and to bring joy to the local people.
According to an agreement signed in China on Wednesday by the China Wildlife Conservation Association and the Embassy of the Interim Administration of Afghanistan, the animals include two lions, two bears, a wolf, two deer, two peacocks and other animals. They are expected to be sent to Afghanistan as early as August.
Provided by Beijing Badaling Safari World, the animals, mostly in couples, are expected to breed babies and take root in the war-ravaged nation.
After Marjon, the one-eyed and only lion in Kabul Zoo, died at the age of 38 in February, Beijing Badaling Safari World and China Wildlife Conservation Association expressed their wish to donate two lions to the zoo in the capital of the war-ravaged nation.
The good wish was welcomed by the Embassy of the Interim Administration of Afghanistan in China, which later expressed hope of seeing more animals donated to Kabul Zoo.
To foster friendship between the Chinese and Afghan people, and in order to bring happiness to Afghan children, Safari World decided to make a free donation of animals and fulfil the embassy's hopes.
According to Safari World's deputy manager Wang Wei, a successful donation demands exit permits, quarantine approvals, and funds for shipping.
So far, Safari World has obtained all necessary exit permits for the animals. In the following days, the animals will undergo the necessary quarantine process - which usually takes 30 days - and then make the trip to Afghanistan in early August.
According to the agreement, the animals will be handed over to Afghanistan in Urumqi.
"The animals will first be shipped to Urumqi by train and then be sent to Kabul by air," said Li Jing, a staff member with Badaling Safari World.
An animal keeper will also go with the animals to attend to them during the trip and work at Kabul Zoo for one month to help the animals adjust.
(China Daily July 12, 2002)