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| Under EU law Morgan, highlighted, cannot be used for mainly commercial purposes or breeding. Photo: www.freemorgan.org |
The wild orca found in the Wadden
Sea in 2010 and now kept at the Loro Parque amusement park in Tenerife is
pregnant, in contravention of the conditions of her transfer to Spain.
Loro
Parque earlier refused to comment on the pregnancy rumours when contacted by
DutchNews.nl but has now confirmed the pregnancy in a statement on its website.
In the statement, the park says it ‘considers it a natural right of every
animal to reproduce which must not be repressed under any circumstance.’
The
orca, nicknamed Morgan, was found in a severely weakened state in the Wadden
Sea in 2010 and sent to the Dolphinarium in Harderwijk to recover. The
then-junior economic affairs minister Henk Bleker, who was responsible for
Morgan, decided she could not be returned to the wild and she was sent to the
Loro Parque in Spain instead.
The original European CITES certificate approving
the transfer stated that Morgan would be used for research purposes only.
However, the orca has since become part of a show of performing animals and,
according to the Free Morgan Foundation (FMF), which is fighting to release the
animal back into the wild, her health is suffering. Breeding the killer whale
would also be in breach of the certificate.
‘For us this news doesn’t come as a
surprise. Loro Parque has been busy for years trying to get Morgan pregnant.
They have done this despite the ban on breeding and her young age when a
pregnancy can be dangerous to both mother and calf,’ FMF vice chair Hester
Bartels said in a statement to the press.
Morgan is now 11 years old, with an expected
average life span of 50.
Court
The news about Morgan’s pregnancy comes only
weeks before a court hearing on January 23 in which the decision by the junior
minister not to intervene regarding Morgan’s situation at Loro Parque goes to
appeal.
The foundation says new evidence has emerged concerning Morgan’s
welfare at Loro Parque, including the failure of the Dutch and Spanish CITES
management authorities to abide by the terms of Morgan’s exemption certificate.
They also failed to take affirmative measures to ensure that Morgan is not
subjected to breeding, the foundation said. Morgan’s pregnancy will result in a
hybrid calf. While this would do nothing for the maintenance of the wild orca
population, a calf with a new bloodline would be financially advantageous for
the park, the FMF said.
The park, however, says breeding programmes are in line
with the European guideline and the Spanish law on zoos.

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