دسته: English Section

  • کشف دو قطعه تاکسیدرمی از یک واحد فروش مبلمان در استان قم/ تصویر

    کشف دو قطعه تاکسیدرمی از یک واحد فروش مبلمان در استان قم/ تصویر

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    دیده بان حقوق حیوانات: رییس اداره امور حیات وحش حفاظت محیط زیست استان قم گفت: دو قطعه تاکسیدرمی روباه و سمور از یک واحد فروش مبلمان در قم کشف و به موزه تاریخ طبیعی استان منتقل شد.

    به گزارش روابط عمومی اداره کل حفاظت محیط زیست استان قم، محمدرضا عابدی با اشاره به ارایه گزارش تخلفات زیست محیطی از سوی شهروندان در سخنانی اظهار داشت: فعالان و دوستداران طبیعت در استان، همواره همکاری و مشارکت مناسبی با این اداره کل در جهت کشف و مقابله با متخلفان زیست محیطی داشته و دارند.

    وی در ادامه افزود: تمامی گزارش ها از تخلفات در حوزه حیات وحش اعم از خرید و فروش و نگهداری جانوران وحشی و تاکسیدرمی ها به سرعت از سوی کارشناسان اداره کل حفاظت محیط زیست استان قم بررسی و بر اساس قوانین با متخلفان برخورد می شود.

    رییس اداره امور حیات وحش حفاظت محیط زیست استان قم خاطرنشان کرد: بر اساس یکی از گزارش های مردمی مبنی بر نگهداری دو قطعه تاکسیدرمی در یکی از واحدهای فروش مبلمان، بلافاصله این موضوع مورد بررسی قرار گرفت و دو تاکسیدرمی روباه و سمور کشف و ضبط و به موزه تاریخ طبیعی استان منتقل شد.

  • حیوان آزاری در سیرک، سوژه مقام نخست بخش طبیعت مسابقه عکس مطبوعات جهان/ تصویر

    حیوان آزاری در سیرک، سوژه مقام نخست بخش طبیعت مسابقه عکس مطبوعات جهان/ تصویر

    دیده بان حقوق حیوانات: یونگژی چو (Yongzhi Chu) میمونی که برای نمایش در سیرک در حال آموزش است با نزدیک شدن مربی از ترس دو لا شده است. با داشتن بیش از 300 گروه نمایشی، سوژو (Suzhou) به عنوان خانه سیرک های چینی شناخته می شود.

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    World Press Photo Contest 2015 19 photos First prize nature category, singles: Yongzhi Chu – A monkey being trained for a circus cowers as its trainer approaches. With more than 300 troupes, Suzhou is known as the home of the Chinese circus.

     

  • نمایشگاه تصویر مرگ در جسد پلاسیده مان با رویکرد حمایت از حقوق حیوانات

    نمایشگاه تصویر مرگ در جسد پلاسیده مان با رویکرد حمایت از حقوق حیوانات

    دیده بان حقوق حیوانات: این نمایشگاه با عنوان «تصویر مرگ در جسد پلاسیده مان» با تاکید بر حمایت از حقوق حیوانات از ۱۷ تا ۳۰ بهمن در گالری ایده برگزار می‌شود. محمد شمس و حامد کاظمی با تکیه بر بازتاب خشنونت در حیات حیوانات، این تاثیر را در آثار خود عینی کرده‌ و در برابر دید تماشاگران قرار داده‌اند. گالری ایده به آدرس خیابان خردمند شمالی، خیابان هجدهم شماره ۲۶ از ۱۷ تا ۳۰ بهمن میزبان علاقه‌مندان خواهد بود.

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  • Iran’s campaign for animal-free circuses gains momentum

    File photo shows an Iranian circus performer playing with an animal.

    Animal Rights Watch: A national campaign for removing animals from circuses has gained fresh momentum after more provincial departments of environment endorsed the plea.

    A spokesperson for Iran’s Animal Rights Watch announced Saturday that environmental departments in 21 out of 31 Iranian provinces have joined the national campaign to ban circuses that use animals.

    The “Not in Circuses” campaign, launched in the province of Isfahan based on religious decrees banning animal abuse, has entered into operational phase with the accession of 21 provinces, Shahram Amiri Sharifi said in an interview with ISNA.

    “By staging circuses that are free from animals, we want to show that we can stage entertaining shows without abusing animals,” he said.

    The animal rights activist said more than 40 nongovernmental organizations have already joined the campaign. He also called on Iran’s Ministry of Education to ban tours that take students to animal circuses.

    Visiting circuses is not a popular hobby in Iran, but shows still use animal performers to entertain people, especially in southern Iranian provinces.

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  • Religious leader: Islam respects animals’ rights

    Animal Rights Watch: Qom, Jan 17, IRNA – Grand Ayatollah Seyyed Mohammad Ali Alavi-Gorgani said on Saturday Islam is the religion of kindness and love, does not differentiate between the creatures in basic rights, and thus the animals enjoy certain rights.

    ‘Islam recognizes certain rights and status for the animals, and even the Imams of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) Infallible Household personality traits show that they were all opposed to teasing and harming the wild and tame animals,’ said the prominent seminary tutor in a meeting with the Iranian Environment Activists and Animal Rights Watch Group.

    The ayatollah said that Islam has plans for the entire human beings and other living creatures and plants, including total ban on harming and teasing of the animals.

    ‘The creation of the animals has not been in vain, because the universe is a world of communications, but the human beings, as the Glorious Qur’an reiterates, is incapable of comprehending al the realities of the universe, which is the reason why some people quite illogically harm the animals.

    He said that the individuals that disrespect the animals’ rights will in the Hereafter be questioned about those deeds, which is why culture building on respecting the animals’ rights is necessary in our society.

    ‘Lack of respect for protection of environment and the animals’ rights has already created problems for our society, and unfortunately we notice that the people who disrespect the need to preserve the nature and to treat the animals properly are also weak in the fundamentals of beliefs,’ said Ayatollah Alavi-Gorgani.

  • Iranian zoo faces prosecution by government over chained captive bear

    Animal Rights Watch: Babolsar zoo sued and urged to close after social network campaign deplores mistreatment of animals at cramped site

    Babolsar zoo bear, chained to ground
    Babolsar’s zoo young chained bear, above, was reportedly seized from the wild in Gilan province, Iran. Photograph: CHN

    The environmental authorities of Iran have sued a zoo for keeping animals in poor conditions, particularly for chaining a bear to a post.

    Iran’s environment department said on Wednesday it had inspected Babolsar’s zoo, in the northern province of Mazandaran, and was pursuing a legal case following complaints by the public over the mistreatment of animals held there.

    On social networks Iranians recently shared pictures of a bear with a chain fastened to its neck, and expressed outrage about the way the animal was being held captive in Babolsar.

    Mohammad Darvish, of the department’s educational and public participation office, told the news website Tabnak he was dismayed at seeing the bear’s plight and said he believed the zoo should be closed down.

    “I raised the issue with the head of Mazandaran’s environment department and asked him to follow it up as soon as I saw the picture,” he said. “Conservationists visited the zoo the next day and have confirmed [that] animals were being held under bad conditions.”

    Tabnak carried a headline with its article about the zoo, which read: “A few pictures changed the fate of Babolsar’s poor bear.” Darvish told Tabnak that veterinary surgeons had been sent to the zoo.

    “The zoo should be closed down because of its poor facilities and little space,” Darvish said.

    The news site said the bear had been transferred to Babolsar under the previous government of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

    Iran’s cultural heritage news agency, CHN, reported this month that the wild bear was seized from hunters in Gilan province, in the north of the country, four years ago and later transferred to the Babolsar zoo. The agency described the zoo as an animal prison.

    Shahram Amiri Sharifi, of an Iranian animal rights’ group, told CHN the bear was taken to Babolsar for breeding purposes although it had not yet reached that age. Sharifi also said he had seen signs of the bear having been trained to perform in a circus.