From PETA <[email protected]>
Subject Elephants Stabbed to Make Them Entertain Visitors at Thai Tourist Trap
Date August 13, 2019 7:51 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Elephants were found with bleeding wounds on their sensitive temples and ears.
One elephant had a large crack in his toenail. [[link removed]]ACTION ALERT
Dear Friend,

A breaking new PETA video exposé
[[link removed]] of Thailand's Samutprakan Crocodile Farm and Zoo shows the abuse endured by a
suffering baby elephant made famous by a recent National Geographic
[[link removed]] feature. As the investigation footage shows, elephants at the facility are chained for most of their lives and stabbed with
sharp metal implements in order to coerce them into dancing, bowling, and performing other
uncomfortable and confusing tricks. By paying to see these acts, tourists
supported the abuse.


[[link removed]]Other animals were also treated cruelly in order to entertain tourists. Workers beat crocodiles with bamboo sticks during shows , and a tiger was harassed so that tourists could pose with him for photos.


[[link removed]]PETA has submitted its findings to the Thai police, but we need your help, too.
Please make compassionate travel decisions by never patronizing businesses that
exploit wild animals or allow direct contact between humans and animals—even
facilities that claim to be sanctuaries.


[[link removed]]Please also join us in urging HopeTrip—which offers tours that visit Samutprakan
Crocodile Farm and Zoo—to remove this exhibit from its itineraries immediately:

Take Action
[[link removed]]Thank you for your compassion for animals.

Sincerely,

This e-mail was sent to: [email protected]

Manage Your E-Mail Subscriptions
[[link removed]] | Unsubscribe From All E-Mail
[[link removed]]

Please do not respond to this e-mail Instead, click here
[[link removed]] to contact PETA.

[[link removed]] [[link removed]] [[link removed]]

This e-mail was sent by
PETA, 501 Front St., Norfolk, VA 23510 USA.
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis