Polish zoo takes in lions and tigers driven out of Ukraine
Tigers that were evacuated by Poznan Zoo employees from a sanctuary near Kyiv and taken to Poland are seen at Poznan Zoo in Poznan, Poland, March 4, 2022. (Reuters photo)


As the Russian invasion in Kyiv intensified, the zoo was shut down and its 300 animals were taken to different shelters. A truck carrying six lions, six tigers, two caracals and an African wild dog from a sanctuary east of Kyiv reached Poland Thursday after a two-day drive, a Polish zoo official said.

The owner of the sanctuary had asked for help from Poznan zoo in western Poland to get the animals to safety. "They had to go a long way around to avoid Zhytomyr and other bombardment zones. They had to turn back many times, because all the roads were blown up, full of holes, impossible to pass with such cargo, which is why it took so long," said Poznan zoo spokesperson Malgorzata Chodyla. "But here they are, and we just can't believe it."

A first attempt to make the journey failed after the truck encountered Russian tanks and could not get through. Chodyla said all the animals, including tiger cubs, survived the long journey, but the zoo was worried about a 17-year-old female tiger who looked very tired.

Helping the driver were three older men with no experience in handling wild animals, and who had now gone back to Kyiv to defend their city, she said. After the animals got some rest in Poznan, they might travel further west. A Belgian sanctuary declared it would take in the six lions and the African wild dog, Chodyla added.