More horses die as Bangladesh tourist town reels from COVID-19 closures

Twenty-one horses that used to carry tourists along Cox's Bazar beach in southeastern
Twenty-one horses that used to carry tourists along Cox's Bazar beach in south-eastern Bangladesh died in one month, their owners said. (File photo: AFP/Tanbir Miraj)

COX'S BAZAR, Bangladesh: Animal activists in Bangladesh have warned of a growing crisis among horses used for tourism during the country's COVID-19 lockdown, after owners said on Wednesday (Jun 16) that five more had died of starvation in a popular resort town.

Twenty-one horses that used to carry tourists along Cox's Bazar beach in south-eastern Bangladesh died in one month, their owners said, after a lockdown imposed from Apr 14 saw visitors to the scenic spot dry up.

The owners - who make ends meet through horse-riding services for tourists on the beach - said that they had no income to buy fodder for the horses, and had to take out micro-loans just to feed their own families.

"Tourist arrivals in the beaches have ground to a halt. My horses are idle," Farida Begum, spokeswoman of the Cox's Bazar Horse Owners Association and a horse owner herself, told AFP.

"Five more horses have died since the start of the month ... I've borrowed money from a micro-lender to buy food for the horses. I had to mortgage my sister-in-law's ornaments to pay a loan instalment."

Begum said that another five of the remaining 64 horses at Cox's Bazar were "ill due to starvation".

"If we soon cannot start feeding them properly, they will die as well," she said.

READ: Horses starve to death as COVID-19 pandemic hits Bangladesh tourism

Another horse owner, Rezaul Karim, said that he was struggling with "neck-deep debt".

"The horses are turning violent and bad-tempered due to hunger. Often they bite each other while roughhousing. This is a matter of concern as they are usually very tame animals," he said.

Activist Ibrahim Khalil said that government officials did not take the deaths of the animals seriously as he warned that the situation could worsen if the government did not step in to help the owners.

But Suraiya Akhter, one of the town's administrators, denied that the horses had died from starvation and said that the owners had not asked for fodder.

"We provided food for 16 days and later we heard a private company would look after the food of the horses," Akhter told AFP.

The nation of 168 million people, which remains in a lockdown, has reported nearly 840,000 virus infections and more than 13,250 deaths so far, although experts say that the actual figures could be much higher due to undercounting.

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Source: AFP/kg