Agriculture Minister Chen Bao-ji has slammed A Ho's owner, the head of a
private ranch, for what he said was carelessness in transporting the
animal and, while a post-mortem will be performed on the mammal to
determine the exact cause of death, the government is considering
prosecuting the hippo's owner.
"The city government has asked prosecutors to look into the case," Chen Ming-hui, a local official, said, adding that the ranch has been ordered to come up with a plan to improve the management of the rest of animals being kept there. The initial result of the autopsy performed in Taipei Zoo linked the tragedy to the first fall, which crushed the beast’s diaphragm. The owner could face a jail term of up to a year under the island's animal protection law.
The first of the accidents happened on Friday when the panicked hippo
jumped from the truck he was being transported in, breaking a leg. Then,
when the hippo was being taken back to the farm for treatment of its
injuries, the cable on a hoist broke and the animal's container crashed to the ground from
a height of two meters. "The animal was not properly protected during
the transportation process, leading to its injuries. What's worse, it
had not received due medical treatment the last two days," said Chu
Tseng-hung, the head of the non-profit Environment and Animal Society of
Taiwan.
"The city government has asked prosecutors to look into the case," Chen Ming-hui, a local official, said, adding that the ranch has been ordered to come up with a plan to improve the management of the rest of animals being kept there. The initial result of the autopsy performed in Taipei Zoo linked the tragedy to the first fall, which crushed the beast’s diaphragm. The owner could face a jail term of up to a year under the island's animal protection law.
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