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During the gathering of delegates and observers at
COP 11 in Gigiri, Kenya (April 2000) many attendees visited Kenya’s
famous baby elephant sanctuary where they oohhed and ahhhed and snapped
countless photos snuggling with the toddler pachyderms. Kenya and the
sanctuary are poster children of the non-use NGO community who espouse a
"holier than thou" attitude towards sustainable use nations. Now,
it seems, that they and their orphaned elephant safe home are a bit
embarrassed. Sanctuary founder and CEO, Daphne Sheldrick has exposed the
Animal Rights hypocrisy in attempting to have electric prods banned
globally. Why? The sanctuary uses them to correct unacceptable baby
elephant behavior.
According to Sheldrick, the
orphanage handlers administer "a tiny zing with a small electric prod
powered by two torch (flashlight) batteries" when their cumbersome
orphan charges display tendencies "to knock people down." The
"tiny zing" is hardly the cruel "shock" described by
NGOs working to have the tool outlawed. Still, when word of the
disciplinary technique leaked to the press, NGO critics, including those
funding the elephant shelter, were quick to condemn the use of the electric
prods. 
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