Home News Canada’s amusement park threatens 30 Belu to euthanize whales.

Canada’s amusement park threatens 30 Belu to euthanize whales.

Canada’s amusement park threatens 30 Belu to euthanize whales.

Canadian entertainment parks are threatening that 30 Belu will euthanize whales after blocking the government’s request to send it to China.

Ontario’s Marineland hoped to offer cetaceans off at the theme park in Zhuhai after having had many years of animal welfare and financial problems.

Last week, however, the Canadian government was rejected by the Canadian government last week for facing non -standard treatment similar to “public entertainment”.

The park asked for federal funds to keep taking care of the animals, but this was denied as a “inappropriate” brand by the fishery minister Joanne Thompson.

According to the New York Times and CBC News, Belugas may have to sleep due to lack of funds due to lack of operation.

This is “the direct result of the minister’s decision.”

The park was closed during the summer while still removing animals during the summer, saying that it was in “important financial state” and could not provide an appropriate care for whales.

But Thompson said that Marine Land’s lack of alternative housing for Belugas said that the Canadian government should suggest a bill for his care.

Marineland hoped to send Belugas to Zhuhai’s Chimelong Ocean Kingdom between Hong Kong and Macau in China.

Thompson refused to export permission due to the strengthening of the fishing law in 2019, and used whales and dolphins for entertainment illegally banned moving.

“I was conscientiously conscientiously conscientiously approved to export exports to sustain the treatment of this Belugas,” she said.

“Approval of requests would have meant a continuous life of captivity and returning to popular entertainment.”

Marineland’s criticism began in 2020 when animal welfare services began to investigate the park.

It declared that 12 whales in the park died for two years and that all parks of marine life suffered.

According to the Canadian media, in November, Beluga died up to 20 people with 20 deaths who died in a year.

The park visitors have begun to plunge and Marineland has been appealing to reconstruct its own land by moving animals while looking for a new buyer in February.

Animal welfare activists expressed their anger at Marineland’s behavior and expressed the possibility that whales would be killed.

Camille Labchuk, executive director of the Canadian Animal Judicial Department, added Marine Land, “a moral obligation to fund the future of this animal.”

World animal protection urged local governments to seize Belugas, saying, “Leadership should be shown and these animals should be the best treatment.”

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