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    A labour of love

    AP – At the stroke of 10 every morning at the only zoo in Nepal, a 41-year-old pelican arrives at the entrance of the animal kitchen, waiting patiently for programme officer Ganesh Koirala to arrive.

    The pelican knows that with Koirala will come breakfast – a one-kilogramme fish.

    Inside the busy kitchen, zookeepers wash vegetables and cut meat and fish for the zoo’s residents.

    The Central Zoo in Kathmandu is home to more than 1,100 animals and 114 species, including Bengal tigers, snow leopards, red pandas, one-horned rhinos and Asian elephants. More than 15 of 38 local endangered species reside in the zoo, which welcomes around one million visitors per year. The zoo originated in 1932 as the private collection of a ruler, but now is managed by a government trust and is open to the public.

    “When I am on my day off, I cannot stop thinking whether the animals got their food on time. They are like small babies,” said zookeeper for over a decade Rojina Shrestha.

    Some of the animals were brought to the zoo with injuries, were orphaned, or were causing a nuisance to communities, Koirala said. But space is limited to accommodate them in the six-hectares site.

    Authorities hope to move the zoo to a different location outside the capital, but government resources are limited.

    ABOVE & BELOW: A pelican picks fish from a basket at the animal kitchen in the Central Zoo in Lalitpur, Nepal; and zookeepers chop fruits and vegetable. PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP
    Students receive food from a zookeeper to feed the zoo animals. PHOTO: AP
    ABOVE & BELOW: Photos show animals at the Central Zoo. PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP

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