Axl Rose pours out feelings about giraffe slaughter 'tragedy' in open letter
Rocker Axl Rose has written an open letter in which he takes aim at zoo bosses in Denmark for their lack of humanity after slaughtering a beloved giraffe to prevent inbreeding.
The Guns N' Roses frontman was left appalled last week (10Feb14) after learning about the death of Somali giraffe Marius, who was shot dead by handlers at Copenhagen Zoo and then chopped up and fed to the lions - all in front of a group of kids.
An image of the dead mammal went viral and prompted an outcry from
animal rights groups, but venue bosses defended the move by
insisting the cull was the only way to stop Marius from reproducing
among his own kind.
Expressing his disgust at the killing on Twitter.com, he wrote,
"Seriously, let me get this straight... the Danes killed a
two-year-old baby giraffe, chopped him up and fed him to the lions
- allegedly in front of kids - to avoid inbreeding, rather than
find a place for it?
Now Rose has further detailed his anger in an open letter, entitled
Marius, which he posted online on Monday (17Feb14).
In the lengthy note, Rose claims Marius' killing was "a waste of a
healthy young animal's life" and brands the manner of his slaughter
"particularly barbaric". He goes on to accuse zoo bosses of failing
to show any compassion with their "seemingly cold and clinical
responses and attitudes regarding this unfortunate event" as they
ignored calls to find Marius a new home, and insisted they came
across as "arrogant" and "completely heartless" as they defended
their decision.
He adds, "For most normal everyday people that love, care about and
enjoy animals this event has been a tragedy. An unexpected,
unimaginable and what for many is most devastating a seemingly
avoidable horror show (sic) that somehow seems lost on the
professionals involved and those speaking for the zoo a facility
that's in my opinion thought to exist for the animals, the public,
educational purposes and science in as best a sense of harmony as
possible.
"Just as it's a privilege for the public to visit, view and
experience these animals it's also a privilege to work with and
care for the animals and have the opportunity to do so while
interacting and/or working with the public.
"Unfortunately somehow in this instance all or much of that seems
to have been forgotten."