
ArmInfo.As a result of the actions of Armenian law enforcement, the animals from the private zoo of businessman Gagik Tsarukyan, leader of the Prosperous Armenia Party, are facing potential starvation, as reported by Narine Kirakosyan, founder of the "Eco-Media" NGO.
Kirakosyan reported that zoo staff have been denied entry to the park, as the premises have been sealed by police. Authorities are allegedly preventing zookeepers and caretakers from accessing the site, thereby blocking them from watering plants and feeding the diverse collection of birds, fish, nine Nile crocodiles, and 12 purebred sport horses (including Arabian and English stallions).
"According to zoologists, the horses cannot survive without water and food for more than a day. Tsarukyan's horses have now gone without water for over 24 hours. While the crocodiles are typically fed once a week, their feeding schedule has been disrupted, and they have now been starving for over 10 days. The birds and other animal species are in equally dire condition, as the caretakers have not been permitted to provide them with even a single grain of feed since Saturday. Access to the territory has also been denied to the equestrian trainer and their students," Kirakosyan wrote in a Facebook post.
"The animals are being treated cruelly; they are being starved and deprived of water. These animals were never intended to be victims of political retribution, yet they have become exactly that. Our state bodies have chosen this path. Every government official should have acted in the interest of the animals in this matter, rather than out of fear of losing their jobs," she added.
Kirakosyan emphasized that relocating these animals is not a viable or humane solution, noting that the conditions at the Tsarukyan estate were specifically designed for their well-being. She further recalled the death of a lioness confiscated by investigators, which she attributed to the improper organization of transport for wild animals. Kirakosyan raised concerns that the lioness may have been pregnant and expressed skepticism regarding the official version of the cause of death. She also noted that the fate of the remaining animals confiscated from Tsarukyan two other lions and a tiger remains unknown.
In light of these developments, Kirakosyan has appealed to the Armenian Ministry of Environment, the Yerevan Municipality, and several international environmental organizations, urging them to intervene in what she described as an "unacceptable situation." . Note, on July 6, law enforcement officers confiscated three lions and one tiger from Tsarukyan as part of a criminal case involving "illegal hunting." On July 7, it was reported that one of the lions, a female, who was anesthetized for transport to the Yerevan Zoo, never woke up. Zoo management claimed the lioness died because she was "of advanced age and had numerous illnesses." Experts, however, believe the lioness's death was caused by either malicious intent or negligence on the part of those transporting the animals.