Wildlife Charity Calls for an End to 'Tiger Selfies' Will Coldwell - The Guardian | |
go to original July 29, 2014 |
Belly rub tiger. #tinderguyswithtigers #tinder #tigers (Tumblr)
An animal protection charity is calling on tourists to turn down opportunities to take photos of themselves with wild animals, as a growing number of such images, including “tiger selfies”, surface online.
Coinciding with Global Tiger Day, Care for the Wild International, which is pushing their No Photos, Please! campaign into Thailand next month, wants to highlight the impact the photos have on wildlife.
The charity’s plea comes at a time when a particularly reckless craze has been catching the attention of the media – men taking photos with tigers to use on their Tindr profiles.
Speaking to The Guardian, the charity’s campaigns and communications manager Chris Pitt said: “People want to copy the photos they’ve seen online, which leads to more animal suffering.”
He added: “A lot of us when we’ve travelled have seen an opportunity to take a photo with a monkey on your shoulder. In Thailand it’s very popular to have a photo with a slow loris – people are encouraged to think they’re cute and good for a photo but these are nocturnal animals from the jungle being dragged around neon-lit resorts, with their teeth and claws clipped, having cameras flashed in their eyes.”
As well as the risk to wildlife, tourists are also be putting themselves at danger for the sake of a photo.
Read the rest at The Guardian
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