MYANMAR’S first elephant museum will be opened near the Natural
History Museum of the Yangon Zoological Garden in Yangon to commemorate World
Wildlife Day, which will be observed on 3 March, according to the Forest
Department.
The opening ceremony of the elephant museum will be held with
another ceremony at which elephant tusks and other parts seized by the
department will be burnt, according to a media conference held by the Forest
Department on 26 February.
“We will destroy items meant for illegal trading which we seized
as we cannot sell them,” said U Win Naing Thaw, the director of the Nature and
Wildlife Conservation Division under the Forest Department.
“The elephant museum will not be huge, but it will have a lot of
information about elephants. This information will be available in English and
Myanmar languages. The museum will display messages to educate the public about
how elephants can be protected,” said U Thein Toe, the director of the Yangon
Region’s Forest Department.
The museum will be a part of the zoo’s Natural History Museum
and will operate under the supervision of the Forest Department. The museum
will highlight the important role played by wild elephants and elephant
history. It will also focus on the different threats facing the giants of the
jungle and their long-term survival plan.
The museum has been funded by the World Wide Fund for Nature
(WWF), Myanmar. The museum will be open daily and showcase the nature of
elephants.
At least one elephant is killed in Myanmar by hunters every
week. Hunters target not only wild elephants, but also those owned by the
government and private individuals.
Currently, there are about 6,500 elephants in Myanmar, including
1,500 wild elephants and about 5,000 elephants registered by the government and
private owners.
(Translated by Hay Mar)
By Aye Yamone
PHOTO: MIN HTET
Ref; The Global New Light of Myanmar

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