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Animals Asia
Animal Welfare

Shopping mall home to 'world's saddest bear' refuses wildlife park offer

Photos of Pizza show the polar bear lying listlessly in a gloomy, windowless room while visitors crowd around with phones.

A CHINESE SHOPPING mall which houses Pizza, dubbed the “world’s saddest polar bear” has turned down an offer from a UK wildlife park to rehouse him – and instead is planning an expansion.

The Guangzhou Grandview Aquarium said it wanted to take in giant pandas among thousands of other animals.

The windowless facility was criticised internationally after footage emerged of Pizza living in cramped conditions unsuitable for his species.

The aquarium has been at the centre of controversy since opening in January inside a shopping mall.

This week the aquarium holding the forlorn polar bear said it has “no need” for foreign interference, after activists offered to move the animal to a British zoo.

Animals Asia, a Hong Kong-based organisation, created a petition calling for the closure of the Grandview aquarium in the Chinese city of Guangzhou that attracted half a million signatures.

Photos of Pizza shared widely on social media show the bear lying listlessly on the ground in a gloomy, windowless room while visitors crowd around taking photos on their phones.

Sad bear Pizza in his windowless shopping centre room. Animals Asia Animals Asia

Depressing

The facility has been dubbed “the world’s most depressing zoo”. it includes six young beluga whales, five walrus calves, wolves and arctic foxes.

Activists said the Yorkshire Wildlife Park in England had offered to adopt Pizza on condition that he was not replaced by another polar bear, adding the zoo would not pay for the animal due to “fear that any funds could be used to buy more animals”.

But the zoo declined to comment or confirm the offer while the aquarium operator said no one had contacted him about taking the bear, adding they “have no need for foreign organisations to get involved”.

“Yorkshire Wildlife Park has not contacted us,” said the general manager of the aquarium, a man surnamed Fan who refused to give his full name.

We are a legally compliant aquarium, run according to Chinese standards and protecting animal rights.
In the future we will strengthen the protection of animal rights and welfare.

The cost of transferring the large, living carnivore nearly 10,000 kilometres (6,200 miles) from Guangzhou to Doncaster, England “will be raised if the offer is accepted”, Animals Asia said.

The activists said they are now pushing for a meeting with the aquarium in hopes of getting a response to their offer, adding they will draw up a bill if officials agree to have Pizza delivered.

The animal welfare director of Animals Asia, Dave Neale, said in a statement that the aquarium “have the chance to put their mistake right” and end the crush of negative media attention.

The group has been publicising Pizza’s plight since the beginning of the year.

- © AFP, 2016, with reporting from Darragh Peter Murphy.

Read: Over 120 Irish lambs have reportedly died of suffocation on a flight to Singapore

Read: Government says it has no plans to ban the use of animals in circuses

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