Sun Bear Anuk exploring the outdoor quarantine space

FOUR PAWS Rescues Sun Bear Cub from Illegal Wildlife Trafficking in Vietnam

“Anuk” arrived in a critical state and is now receiving special care at BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh after being confiscated by the police from a taxi

25.11.2024

Cape Town, 25 November 2024 – Sick and severely dehydrated - this is how Sun bear cub Anuk was brought to BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh in Northern Vietnam. The approximately five-month-old female bear has been nursed back to health with round-the-clock care since her arrival at BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh. Global animal welfare organisation FOUR PAWS, who took the cub into its care in mid-August, highlights that little Anuk is one of many Sun and Asiatic black bears falling victim to the illegal wildlife trade. Anuk was most likely smuggled from Laos into Vietnam and confiscated by the Vietnamese police from a taxi at a bus station in Thanh Hóa, where the trader sought to send her off to Southern Vietnam. After the quick intervention, the Thanh Hóa police was able to bring her to BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh. In her new species-appropriate home, Anuk can now grow up in safety and has already settled in well.  

Orphaned when still a tiny cub, the little Sun bear is particularly vulnerable as her immune system is not fully developed yet. “Anuk’s condition has much improved since her arrival. She was in a critical state and suffered from severe dehydration. With intensive veterinary care and much love, our experienced team at BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh could nurse her back to life. Anuk has turned into a healthy, curious, playful little cub. Although we are happy that Anuk was found in time, it is a shame that she will be denied a life in freedom,” says Magdalena Scherk-Trettin, Wild Animal Rescue & Advocacy Senior Project Manager at FOUR PAWS. Anuk, which means “bear” in Greenlandic, was 45-60 days old when she was found. She is fed five times per day and loves her bottles of milk, as well as eating vegetables and ants. The little cub wouldn’t survive in the wild without her mother and due to a lack of rehabilitation programmes and safe places in Vietnam, a release into the wild is not possible. This is why Anuk will receive the best care and will spend the rest of her life at BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh.

One of a kind - Sun bears are close to extinction in Vietnam

Today sun bears are on the brink of extinction in Vietnam. Both Asiatic and Sun bear populations in Vietnam have decreased dramatically since the mid-90s, when many were trapped in the wild and caught in the clutches of the bile farming industry. Legal and illegal wildlife trade in Vietnam is a lucrative industry, which sees animals being sold in markets, restaurants, online and used in pseudo-traditional medicines. Since 2005 the advertisement, sale and possession of bear bile is illegal in Vietnam, but the cruel practice continues behind closed doors. Almost 20 years after this ban was issued, still around 200 bears are being kept on about 60 bile bear farms, with Hanoi being a hot spot of this gruesome practice. The bears are kept in extreme cruelty. The cages are so tiny, some do not even have enough space to lie down. Their bile is usually extracted by puncturing their gallbladder, often with insufficient anesthesia, resulting in incredible pain.

Anuk is the only Sun bear at BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh. She has recovered well since her arrival and particularly enjoys the many climbing opportunities in her cub enclosure. Sun bears love climbing trees to obtain fruits and insects as well as to build nests in trees to sleep in them. They are omnivores and primarily eat insects, fruit and honey.

BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh: A species-appropriate home for rescued bears 

FOUR PAWS has been working with local partners since 2017 to rescue as many bears as possible from their sad fate. With its BEAR SANCTUARY in Ninh Binh, FOUR PAWS is supporting the Vietnamese government to contribute to an end of bear farming and provide a species-appropriate home for rescued bears. BEAR SANCTUARY Ninh Binh is not only a safe home for former bile bears and bears that are victims of the illegal wildlife trade, but also an awareness and education centre for wildlife conservation in Vietnam. Currently it houses 45 Asiatic black bears and with Anuk one Sun bear cub. The sanctuary currently encompasses a total area of 5.5 hectares with 8 large outdoor enclosures, 3 bear houses, a veterinary clinic and a quarantine area for newly rescued bears, which provides a capacity for up to 50 bears.

/ENDS

Public Relations Officer ZA

Deidre Daniels

Public Relations Officer

Deidre.Daniels@four-paws.org

+27 (0)21 702 4277

+27 (0)78 675 8220

9B Bell Crescent, Westlake Business Park, 
Green Building, Cape Town, 7945

A Public Relations professional with over eight years’ experience in fostering positive relationships between organisations and media.

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FOUR PAWS is the global animal welfare organisation for animals under direct human influence, which reveals suffering, rescues animals in need and protects them. Founded in 1988 in Vienna by Heli Dungler and friends, the organisation advocates for a world where humans treat animals with respect, empathy and understanding. The sustainable campaigns and projects of FOUR PAWS focus on companion animals including stray dogs and cats, farm animals and wild animals – such as bears, big cats and orangutans – kept in inappropriate conditions as well as in disaster and conflict zones. With offices in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, France, Germany, Kosovo, the Netherlands, Switzerland, South Africa, Thailand, Ukraine, the UK, the USA and Vietnam as well as sanctuaries for rescued animals in eleven countries, FOUR PAWS provides rapid help and long-term solutions. www.four-paws.org.za 

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