Two five-year-old Albanian bears carry scars from their days of captivity — Pashuk has marks from the chain on his neck, while Tomi is an alcoholic.
The pair are temporarily staying in Tirana zoo after they were rescued from their owners, amid a new drive to liberate the Balkan nation’s caged brown bears.
There are up to 250 of them roaming free in Albania’s mountains, according to international animal rights group Four Paws, but another several dozen, between 50 and 80, were taken from the wild as cubs.
Photo: AFP
Displayed in cages in restaurants or shackled on beaches, the bears’ role is to amuse and attract tourists and well-heeled customers — who can pose with the animals for one euro (US$1.1) per photograph.
Tomi’s former owner, who runs a restaurant 80km north of Tirana, allowed customers to serve their new furry friend beer and “raki,” the traditional local tipple.
“Coffee and alcohol, there was nothing better to wake him, as with my clients,” the businessman, aged about 40, told reporters, declining to give his name.
Tomi is to be sent with Pashuk and another female bear to Kosovo, which has built a “bear sanctuary” after facing a similar problem.
“Tomi is always stressed and this could be explained by his withdrawal from alcohol,” said Sajmir Shehu of Four Paws.
In March, Albania’s authorities made a deal with Four Paws pledging to liberate its bears and adopt a law making private possession of wild animals a crime punishable by prison.
Until now, fines of 20 euros to 30 euros for keeping the animals were hardly a deterrent, but Albania wants to draw more tourists and does not want to raise controversy over animal abuse.
Albanian Minister of the Environment Lefter Koka said the time of impunity is over.
“Cruelty to animals cannot be a tourist attraction,” Koka said. “We have already identified more than 50 bears in cages.”
Several of the animals have already been sent to parks and sanctuaries in other European countries, while two cubs are due to go to Germany.
However, what about the dozens of others that are incapable of rediscovering a fully wild life?
These animals are “stressed, passive, they bite, they have lost all reflexes to feed themselves, they are sad,” said Zamir Dedej, director-general of Albania’s Agency for Environmental Protection.
“Our space is limited and we cannot keep them here long,” said Mirjam Kastrati, director of Tirana’s small zoo, which is surrounded by concrete towers.
A park would cost more than 4 million euros, an exorbitant sum for Albania, one of the poorest countries in Europe.
However, Koka is determined to carry out his “Bear Forest” project, which he envisages in the Dajti mountain, 10km east of Tirana.
The tradition of exhibiting captive bears has a long history in the Balkans. In Serbia, a common phrase to disperse a curious crowd is: “What’s going on? Is a female bear dancing?”
Although such capture was prohibited in Albania during the rule of former Albanian leader Enver Hoxha, the period of anarchy that saw communism collapse in the early 1990s opened the door to the practice. Nature, along with factories, was looted. Pheasants as well as eagles — the emblem of the country — have almost disappeared from the mountains. Like bears, they were officially protected. Yet no one protested.
Koka says citizens need educating if Albania is to preserve and restore its rich wildlife — and it seems changing mindsets could take time.
“The Table of the Bear,” a chic restaurant in Tirana, draws members of the city’s elite.
Before sitting down to eat, it is fashionable to be photographed with bears Mark and Liza, aged 22, who for a decade have known only their cage.
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