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News / Life / Pets & Wildlife

Lion cubs stuck at Gaza border en route to Jordan shelter

The Columbian
Published: July 3, 2015, 12:00am
10 Photos
Ibrahim Al-Jamal, 17, carries Mona, the female lion cub, as Max the male lion cub is petted by people on the  beach of Gaza City, in the northern Gaza Strip.
Ibrahim Al-Jamal, 17, carries Mona, the female lion cub, as Max the male lion cub is petted by people on the beach of Gaza City, in the northern Gaza Strip. Photo Gallery

RAFAH, Gaza Strip — A pair of lion cubs en route to a wildlife sanctuary in Jordan got stuck at a Gaza-Israel border crossing on Friday, after being kept as pets for almost a year by a family in the crowded coastal strip.

The cubs were taken from the Saed Eldin al-Jamal’s home in the border town of Rafah and transported to the Erez crossing with Israel.

By the time they arrived, the Israeli side of the crossing had closed and the cubs remained in no-man’s land after border guards from the militant Islamic Hamas group, which runs Gaza, refused to let them back into the Palestinian territory.

The Israeli security branch responsible for the crossings said the lions and their entourage showed up out of the blue after the crossing had closed and without any prior coordination and preparations, unlike in a previous case involving lions.

Al-Jamal had bought the cubs when they were a month old from a zoo in the Gaza town of Rafah, after it was hit during last summer’s war between Hamas and Israel. He said the original owners of the small South Jungle Zoo were worried they eventually would not be able to afford to buy meat to feed the cubs as they grew.

The pair — the female, Mona, and her brother, Max — became well known across the Palestinian coastal strip as al-Jamal took them to parks or the beach where children who were brave enough would come up to pet them.

His family kept the cubs in their small, one-floor home inside a crowded refugee camp in Rafah, where they quickly became star attractions. Scores of visitors came to see the cubs play with al-Jamal’s sons and grandchildren in the camp’s narrow alleys.

Earlier Friday at their Rafah home, al-Jamal cried as he gave up the cubs to Amir Khalil from the British charity Four Paws International, which was to take them to Jordan.

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The charity had been trying for months to convince al-Jamal to hand over the cubs. As time passed and concerns grew that the lions would become too big and attack people, al-Jamal relented and agreed to “donate” them in return for about $2,500.

Before the entourage with the cubs departed, al-Jamal’s 17-year-old son Ibrahim burst into tears as he hugged and kissed Mona good-bye.

Khalil told The Associated Press the cubs were a danger to the health and well-being of the al-Jamals, especially the children, and needed a place that was better for them, too.

Last September, Khalil had helped send lions from Gaza to the same Jordan sanctuary, that time a trio of scrawny lions from the Al-Bisan zoo in Beit Lahiya.

“A lion living in a flat is not a normal thing,” Khalil said on Friday. “The lion doesn’t need to sleep on tiles, but on grass, sand or savanna.”

Most of the zoo animals in Gaza have been hauled into the isolated territory through smuggling tunnels linking the territory to Egypt. In one famous scene captured on film, Gazans used a crane to lift a camel over the border fence by one of its legs as the animal writhed in agony.

Israel and Egypt have imposed a blockade on Gaza since 2007, when Hamas seized power there.

Khalil said there remain more than 45 lions in Gaza, living in makeshift zoos, even homes, often being looked after by untrained staff.

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