A giraffe in its enclosure at UI Zoo and A camel at UI Zoo
 
Many animals are dying off in zoos across Nigeria, but a visit by CHUX OHAI to some of them reveals some positive exceptions. Additional reports by Success Nwogu and Kamarudeen Ogundele
 As a young boy, Anayo Eze always looked forward to visiting the Enugu Zoological Gardens in company with his older cousins.
Recalling those exciting moments, he 
says, “I cannot forget the first time I saw a lion. It was a full grown 
one. I can’t forget its eyes and the long hair on its neck. Before then,
 lions only existed in my picture book and in moonlight tales that my 
grandma told me. I could have stretched out my hand to touch the animal,
 but my cousin wouldn’t allow me. He had warned that the lion could bite
 my fingers off. I was scared. But that didn’t stop me from repeating 
the visit to the lion’s cage again and again.”
Eze also found other animals at the zoo 
attractive. He liked the chimpanzees and monkeys most. One day, he came 
to the zoo with some bananas and fed the apes. “I had felt thrilled by 
the way they snapped off the fruits from my hand and ate them. After 
that day, I would come with more bananas and sometimes, biscuits,” he 
says.
In those days, he adds, many people 
liked to visit the zoo, which was situated in the Ekulu area of Enugu, 
right in the Government Reservation Area. Picnics and even parties were 
common, and there were many animals on display.
“Unfortunately, the zoo is no more. One 
day, the government decided to destroy it and sell the land. Nobody 
knows what happened to the few animals that were left. Maybe they were 
sold off or killed,” Eze says.
Investigation shows that the former site
 of the zoo has been transformed into an upscale housing estate occupied
 by the rich and influential residents of Enugu. The place is actually 
called Zoo Estate.
A plot of land in the estate sells for 
N50m. So far, only politicians, including the leader of a well known 
political party in the Southeast, have been able to afford it.
Also, several movies have been shot on location at the estate, which is fast becoming a hangout for Nollywood producers.
The displacement of the zoological 
garden, no doubt, implies that millions of children in the state have 
been deprived of an important source of recreation and environmental 
education.
“It is like robbing Peter to pay Paul. 
Our children have been robbed of an opportunity to learn about animals 
and how they behave in the ecosystem. Nothing can be more instructive 
than a physical encounter with live animals at the zoo. But they have 
been denied such unique experience,” Eze laments.
Despite such a disorienting development,
 Nigerians still love to watch animals, either in simulated natural 
habitats like the Lekki Conservation Centre in Lagos and the Obafemi 
Awolowo University Biological Gardens in Ile-Ife; or zoological gardens 
and parks in some universities across the country.
Between two worlds of animals
Inside the Lekki Conservation Centre in 
Lagos, the first sight that greets first-time visitors is a group of 
peacocks proudly showing off their beautiful feathers and strutting 
around a cone-shaped building that serves as an auditorium.
A short distance from the birds, an 
adult tortoise seems to be quietly enjoying the warmth of the sun on the
 well-tended lawn around the building. But a closer look at the animal 
shows that it is actually feeding on the luxuriant grass.
The tortoise is so engrossed in its 
feeding that it hardly notices other signs of life in the reserve. A 
sturdy wooden track ushers visitors into about 1.8km nature trail that 
reveals an expansive stretch of marshland and savannah grassland teeming
 with wildlife, as well as aquatic flora and fauna.
In the 78-hectare nature conservation, 
an attempt has been made to save different types of animals, reptiles 
and birdlife from extinction. The endangered species include monkeys, 
squirrels, snakes, crocodiles, monitor lizards, duikers, giant rats and 
hogs.
The animals are evidently at home in 
their simulated natural habitats. Like the tortoise, they are free and 
safely out of the reach of human predators. But while squirrels, monkeys
 or birds could leap or fly from one tree to another at will and enjoy 
the comfort of their habitat without interference from external forces, 
especially human beings, their cousins in some zoos located hundreds of 
kilometers from the resort are not so lucky.
During a visit to the University of 
Ibadan Zoological Garden on Sunday, our correspondent found that some 
animals were still being kept in cages.  Despite the instructions of the
 International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural 
Resources, the regulatory body for zoos all over the world, the only 
warthog in the garden, some birds, monkeys and a couple of pigs were all
 locked up in cages that allowed them little room for movement.
Preparing for the future
Yet, there is ample evidence of concerted efforts to rehabilitate the UI zoo and reposition it for the future.
When she was appointed as the director 
of the zoo in 2010, Dr. Olajumoke Morenikeji immediately drew up a plan 
to restore it to its former glory.
“The zoo has been here for a long time. 
It was founded in 1948 alongside the Zoological Department of the 
university. Initially there were very few animals. By 1974, it became a 
full-fledged zoo. More people were coming in to see the animals then. 
With time, decay set in and most of the facilities in the garden were 
affected by lack of maintenance. The structures were not good enough and
 there were not many animals any longer.
“When I assumed office, my vision for 
the garden was to raise it to the international standard. I started 
going from one company to another soliciting assistance. I made a 
presentation to the management of the university on how I intend to 
reposition the zoo. From that year, the Nigeria Bottling Company and 
several individuals were kind enough to donate structures, cash or 
animals to the garden. The result is a remarkable improvement in 
patronage. It is obvious that people like what is happening here and we 
are encouraged by the kind gestures of our donors,” she says, in an 
interview with our correspondent.
One of the biggest donors is the General
 Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Pastor Enoch Adeboye.
 He donated N45m for the rehabilitation of the zoo. Also, the Vice 
Chancellor of UI, Prof. Isaac Adewole, has supported the director’s 
vision with a lot of donation.
Morenikeji says the UI zoological garden
 boasts a collection of animals that had never existed in the zoo 
before, such as the giraffe and spotted hyenas. In addition to this, 
more structures are under construction in the zoo to replace the old 
ones.
“We had to pull down the old structures 
and build new ones. We have had to refurbish facilities that are still 
good and to upgrade others, such as the Reptile House or Serpentarium, 
which can compete favourably with any other in the world. We have a 
buttery, eatery, and shops. A new administrative building is under 
construction at present. On the ground floor of the building, there will
 be a library and the educational unit of the zoological garden. The 
goal is to enable visiting children to learn more about the animals they
 see in the zoo.
“We have a channel that runs across the 
zoo. In order to prevent flooding, there is a lot of channelisation 
going on at the zoo. It has become very necessary to do this because of 
the rising water table in the world’s,” she says.
As proof of the management commitment to
 replenishing its stock, every cage in the reptile house at the UI zoo 
is filled with various species of snakes, crocodiles and water turtles. 
Although there is no empty cage in this section of the facility, most of
 the creatures seem to be young.
“We are not only replenishing, our 
animals are also laying eggs. Due to the enrichment of the enclosures in
 the zoos, the animals still give birth to their offspring. The water 
turtles are laying eggs. If you go to the ostrich cage, you will find an
 egg there.
“The peahen lays four eggs and hatches 
them on its own. Our lioness recently gave birth to four cubs at once. 
This does not happen in the wild all the time. We are already sourcing 
the animals that you can’t find in the zoo, like hippopotamus. They will
 be arriving very soon,” Morenikeji adds.
A study in neglect
At the Obafemi Awolowo University 
Biological Garden, the scenario is different. The zoo, as it is commonly
 known, is situated directly opposite the Faculty of Social Sciences.  
It is fenced with wire. A cardboard poster spread across a contraption 
that serves as the  ‘gate’ welcomed visitors to the facility.
A few metres from the entrance, a 
well-built female staff of the garden sat under a makeshift shed and 
fiddling with a booklet and a sheaf of papers on a small wooden table. 
And just outside a decrepit wooden structure that also serves as a staff
 office, another woman lay on a bench, obviously idling away.
As always, little signposts pointed the 
way to the cages and enclosures in the zoo through narrow pathways 
bordered by tall trees and thick undergrowth. The scenery, enchanting as
 it seemed, at once reminded our correspondent about D.O Fagunwa’s  
Yoruba novel, Ogboju Ode Ninu Igbo Irunmole – translated by the Nobel laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka as  Forest of a Thousand Daemons.
The only sounds in this forest were the 
chirping of exuberant birds flitting from one tree branch to another – 
and occasional rustle of the leaves on the trees. Otherwise, there was 
deep silence.
Other conspicuous signposts warned 
visitors not to get too close or throw food items at the animals or 
reptiles within the enclosures. Usually, the instructions are written in
 English and in Yoruba. They are meant to protect the visitor and the 
animals. A particularly frightening sign outside the enclosure where 
lions are kept warned in Yoruba that “lions are capable of killing human
 beings”.
Additional notices containing the names 
of the animals, their botanical names and histories are attached to the 
walls of the enclosures or cages.
Empty cages and enclosures
But the visit turned out to be 
disappointing. The sight of many empty enclosures or cages showed that 
the zoo had lost most of its stock of animals.
Instead of a wide variety of exotic 
animals that attracted many adventure-seeking visitors,  mostly students
 of the institution and other members of the public, in the past, the 
zoological section of the OAU biological garden could only boast a 
handful of animals.
Even then, the few surviving animals, 
such as the lone spotted hyena lazing in the sun and patas monkey left 
to languish inside a dungeon that is about 20 feet deep, looked like 
they had not been fed for some days.
Apart from a tiny soft water turtle, a 
peacock and peahen, a couple of wild geese, a crane, lion and a Nile 
crocodile, there was no other animal in the zoo. Our correspondent 
gathered that its enviable collection of primates, birds and reptiles 
had disappeared over the past years.
A senior lecturer in the Department of 
Zoology at the university, on condition of anonymity, blames the 
situation on a number of factors.
“First, what we have is quite different 
from a zoological garden. In a typical zoological garden, you want to 
see all the varieties of animals. But this is a biological garden that 
deals with varieties of life, in terms of animal life and plant life. We
 have a botanical section, zoological section and the ecological forest,
 which is a virgin forest untouched by human beings. Students go there 
to carry out all kinds of research. If it were to be a zoo, you would 
just look at the animals and go away.
“It was during the military era that 
universities ran out of money to feed the animals. Many of the animals 
were sacrificed. It was painful watching them die because there was no 
money to feed them. The sacrificed animals were preserved and kept in 
the Natural History Museum for the public to view.
“Many of the big game were sacrificed 
because there was no money to feed them. It was so bad that to pay the 
salaries of the members of staff of the garden was a problem. At this 
point, many of the enclosures in the zoological section became empty,” 
he says.
Also, giving reasons why some cages and 
enclosures at the UI zoo were empty and big game such as leopards, 
elephants and hippopotamus were absent, Morenikeji says, “Just like 
human beings, animals also grow old and die. The last elephant we had 
died over 25 years ago. It grew old and died. Just like our gorillas, 
elephants have to die when they grow old. Right now, we are sourcing for
 another elephant to fill the vacuum. I know that before the end of the 
year, it will be here in the zoo. This is why we are renovating the 
enclosure for elephants. Also, some zebras are on the way. That is why 
we are rebuilding the zebra enclosure.”
Depleting wildlife in Abuja zoo
When one of our correspondents visited 
the National Children’s Park and Zoo in Abuja, he made a shocking 
discovery. Apart from the fact that the facility bore visible signs of 
neglect, its collection of big game, which included lions, cheetah, 
elephants, tigers and leopards, was depleted.
Although the zoo was leased to a private
 firm for 10 years before the Federal Government recovered it in 2013, 
it seemed to have seriously deteriorated within that period.
A guide at the park told our 
correspondent that some of the animals were either dead or taken away to
 replenish neighbouring zoos.
“The only lion at the park has been 
taken to the zoo in the Aso Rock Villa. The only surviving cheetah died a
 few years ago and ever since, it has not been replaced,” he said.
The few animals left in the zoo include a
 buffalo, a camel, porcupines, a giraffe, zebra, two horses, ducks, 
geese, a tortoise, an ostrich, monkeys, crocodile, eagle, donkey and 
goats. The only parrot could not talk because it was not trained to do 
so.
Investigation shows that the zoo is not 
well funded. In addition, the workers are poorly remunerated and not 
motivated. The highest paid worker actually receives a paltry N26,000 
per month, while a new graduate member of staff receives less than 
N20,000.
The animals are so hungry that two adult
 Nile crocodiles once gave birth to 10 young ones and ate up all but two
 for want of food.
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