2020 In Kent, it now has 40 acres of ancient woodland, with bears, wolves, bison, der, foxes, red squirrel, wild boar, lynx, wild horses, badgers, beavers and others – there are about 200 native animals there.
Paul O'Grady is visiting Port Lympne, a safari/wildlife park in Kent - find out more - and the Aspinall Foundation. The Foundation is committed to conservation, through captive breeding, education and reintroduction. It is working in some of the world’s most fragile environments to save endangered animals and return them to the wild.
There’s a charity caring for lost and abandoned pets who urgently need all our help.
It’s based in Lebanon, and it’s the Beirut for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (BETA). The charity has six staff and it relies on volunteers and international donations. Today, it featured in the Mail on Sunday who ran an article about it and the help it needs.
It houses 850 dogs, 250 cats, three horses, two vervet monkeys and a pelican.
Not only that, the charity’s volunteers give food and medical care to all the strays roaming Beirut.
Dogs and cats in Beirut need help
As you know, there was a huge blast in Beirut in August when 2,700 tons of combustible chemicals stored at the port exploded.
The result was that 200 people were killed. Thousands more were made homeless. And BETA’s teams are searching for dogs and cats who were very distressed and ran away from the explosion area. At the same time, many cats and dogs have been abandoned because of the financial crisis. BETA estimate there are about 150,000 strays in the city of Beirut.
With everything that’s going on – the explosion, the economic crisis and COVID-19, progress on the building has been slow. The fully equipped stable and a monkey enclosure have been built. Work is going on to finish the dog kennels – and the area for seniors.
£150,000 is urgently needed to finish it for the rescue dogs, cats and other animals before Christmas because they are being evicted from the current shelter. And there is a need to provide for the animals’ basic needs such as food and medical care and to carry out their daily tasks.
Please help provide these animals with the safe haven they deserve. They have been through enough and need help.
If you have a cat or a dog, why not make a donation on their behalf and give cats and dogs in Lebanon a safe haven!
BETA is now a 501(c)3 charity organization registered in the USA. Tax identification number: 83-2075807
On Monday 12 October at 9pm on ITV, the comedian John Bishop follows two beluga whales as they are released an entertainment park in China, where they were being held in captivity.
The whales are returned to the wild after an epic journey to the Icelandic beluga whale sanctuary.
This is a two part series and you can see the second episode on Tuesday 13 October, also at 9pm.