750 African Greys dead

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Mar 16, 2010
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750 African Greys die on Durban flight



Dries Liebenberg, Beeld

Durban - More than 750 African Grey parrots worth about R2m died on a flight from Johannesburg to Durban.

The news has caused shock waves among conservationists, bird breeders and those involved in the aviation industry. The parrots died on December 24 on a flight operated by 1time.

Dr Steve Boyes, director of the organisation World Parrot Trust Africa, said steps should be taken to ensure that something like this never happens again.

The parrots were part of an order of 1 650 adult African Greys which were caught in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to be sold to South African breeders.

Ben Moodie, a well-respected Boksburg lawyer, alleges the birds were to be imported for his business Iceland Industrial Projects. He said he was only informed of the birds' fate on December 29.

"At the OR Tambo quarantine the birds were fine and I was informed that on arrival at King Shaka they were dead. I can understand a few casualties along the route, it happens. (But) this doesn't gel and I can only satisfy myself if they show me the carcasses," a distraught Moodie told The Witness.

Altogether 800 of these parrots were imported to South Africa in November. A further 850 are still being held in the DRC, ready to be brought to South Africa.

Disputed

In mid-December the parrots, which were then being kept in quarantine for 30 days at a state facility in Kempton Park, in accordance with legislation, became the focus of a long-standing dispute between breeders and in two urgent court applications.

The result was that Hendrik Matthews, a Roodepoort breeder who alleges the birds were intended for him to cover outstanding debt, had the parrots loaded on December 24 to be taken to a private quarantine station in Umhlanga.

On that day the quarantine station at Kempton Park closed until February 1 for cleaning and upgrading.

According to Michael Saltz, Matthews' lawyer, the birds were healthy when they were loaded at O R Tambo airport for the one hour flight on 1time to Durban. All the requirements for the transport of living cargo were met.

At King Shaka airport in Durban there was no movement to be seen in the crates when they were unloaded.

When the crates were taken to Express Air Services' store and opened, only 10 of the birds were still alive, and an hour later only one had survived, said Boyes.

Small dog survived

According to Anya Potgieter, spokesperson for 1time, the airline then decided it wouldn't transport more than four living animals per crate any longer, and exotic animals will only be transported if arrangements are made ahead of time.

According to The Witness she ruled out that the birds might have died from carbon dioxide inhalation, as the birds were travelling in a hold with an oxygen supply.

The airline denies that something could have happened on the plane to cause the tragedy.

A small dog travelling in the same cargo hold was perfectly healthy upon arrival.

Saltz, however, said parrots from the same group in two crates which were transported by another airline were healthy.

According to him there are indications that a lack of oxygen or dangerous gases could have caused the deaths of the birds.

750 African Greys die on Durban flight: News24: South Africa: News



I cant believe that they are STILL catching wildlife, I hate humans they care about nothing but their own personal gain and they will carry on and on until nothing is left! :(

How many of them were squashed into one grate - to safe costs? Knowing the barbarians of SA....:(

There are still 850 that must come to SA, can you imagine in what state these poor fids are kept! :(

There is absolutely NO reason for them to remove wild birds! There are thousands of them already in SA sitting in poor conditions in pet shops etc. :(
 
Ahhh this story made me so angry and sad.

It is amazing that after all this time, wild catching is still legal in some places.

It is a repulsive side to human nature, all for the sake of a "good deal" I am imagining.

I'd like to collect 750 of them, cram them all together, and chuck it out of a plane over the Atlantic.
 
It doesn't say much for the status of "human" in some people. Will charges be laid?
 
I was in tears earlier this morning when reading the article.
Money money money, everything it just about money.
OMG those poor birds, how they must have suffered.
I pray that those responsible for the tragedy, will suffer more than what the birds did.


 
Linky I like my story better than yours. If this keeps up we will have no more greys in the wild.
 
I can't believe in this day and age, that wild-caught parrots are still legal to import....anywhere.

I'm not a big government control guy, but come on people...these sreatures are super intelligent. They are not turtles or goldfish. They are emotional.

I can only imagine how terrified a flock of parrots must be when they are captured...all "talking" to each other, wondering what the heck is going on.

There are already too many parrots in the "hobby" to begin with. Making parrots cheaper by importing wild ones only serves to further the attitude that they are disposable. This is the same thing that really ticks me off with budgies! Because they cost 30 bucks, some people buy them for their 5 year old.

I have five 99-cent black-skirt tetras in my 46 gallon aquarium that I have had for over ten years. They're only supposed to live about 3 years. Frankly, the aquarium is sort of an annoyance to keep running just for them, but I do it, out of a sense of obligation to give them a good life, since I took them in voluntarily. I wish more people would look at things this way.

Oh well...rant over. Poor CAG's.
 
OMG this type of trade needs to stop. Can you imagine how afraid these parrots were to begin with. Charges need to be filed plus these people that do this type of parrot capturing/trade need to be jammed on top of each other into a crate and put into a cargo hold for at least a days time.
 
And you know what's really sad and sick? Since these 750 perished, they are probably going to go back into the wild to catch 750 more. :( :vomit-smiI hate humanity.
 
I can't even begin to imagine how terrified those poor birds were. What a TERRIBLE fate for them all. I'm so sad when it's night night time for Maui and he just doesn't want to leave my shoulder and actually whines a bit when I say it's time for night night when it gets too late for ME to be up, let alone him. He usually is happy to go to his cage at night to go to sleep, but there ARE some nights, he just simply wants ME, ME, ME to hold him love him scratch him, etc... THEY ARE very emotional beings and super intelligent. This sort of thing makes me SICK and it also REALLY REALLY PISSES ME OFF!! Pardon my language. :(
 

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