It’s a zoo out there
Nepal's Central Zoo is fast running out of space for rescued wildlife
The Central Zoo established in 1932 by Prime Minister Juddha Shumsher Rana houses 942 individual mammals, birds, fishes and 127 species of reptiles. Spread over six hectares, the park in Jawalakhel gets more than one million visitors a year.
Friends of the Zoo has a network of 200 schools and 6,000 members that engages students in cultural and educational tours to Annapurna Conservation Area and Chitwan National Park. But the Central Zoo is fast running out of space for rescued wildlife and wants to expand to Bhaktapur. Two decades later, that is still just talk.
Excerpts of the report published on Nepali Times 20 years ago this week on issue #134 28 February – 3 March 2003:
From the air, you can see why the Jawalakhel Zoo is an oasis, a verdant square in the midst of Patan’s urban sprawl. On the ground, the stately trees and the placid lake make this an ideal place to soothe one’s soul. And of course, the wildlife.
In a country where most public-sector undertakings are crumbling or have gone bankrupt, the Central Zoo is also a management oasis. The zoo now earns Rs 20 million from ticket sales, corporate donations and thelending out of animals and is ploughing the money into development and conservation work. Since the King Mahendra Trust for Nature Conservation (KMNTC) took on a 30-year management contract to run the zoo two years ago, our only zoological park is thriving.
“Luckily, the results of our management and good PR have been successful,” zoo director RK Shrestha boasts. KMNTC recently secured the first donation made to the zoo by a multinational company: Toyota and the Vaidya Group gave a grant of Rs 4 million. Shrestha hopes this will open the door to future monetary assistance from other corporations, and says he finally has enough funds to begin work on redesigning parts of the zoo with an emphasis on animal welfare and visitor facilities.
From archive material of Nepali Times of the past 20 years, site search: www.nepalitimes.com