Elephants in Thailand 'Broken' for Lucrative Animal Tourism
BAN TA KLANG, Thailand (AFP) Separated from their mothers, jabbed with metal hooks, and sometimes deprived of food many Thai elephants are tamed by force before being sold to lucrative tourism sites increasingly advertised as sanctuaries to cruelty-conscious travelers.
Balanced precariously on hind legs, two-year-old Ploy holds a ball in her trunk and flings it towards a hoop, one of many tricks she is learning in Ban Ta Klang, a traditional training village in the east.
Here young elephants are broken to interact with tens of millions of tourists who visit Thailand every year, many eager to capture social media-worthy encounters of the kingdoms national animal playing sports, dancing and even painting.
Villagers in Ban Ta Klang who have been working with the large, gentle animals for generations say taming is necessary for safety reasons and that the force is not excessive.
We do not raise them to hurt them
if they are not stubborn, we do nothing to them, said mahout Charin, as he stroked Ploys head affectionately and spoke of her as part of his family.
Charin makes about $350 a month in a profession that was handed down from his father and grandfather.
https://www.courthousenews.com/elephants-in-thailand-broken-for-lucrative-animal-tourism/