Câu ví dụ #2201
1. This trend is putting a strain on the few elephants alive in Vietnam whose feathers or tails are plucked or cut off by poachers, leaving these animals with the vital organs they use to swarm flies and keep their backs secure.
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2. "the tail is very much a part of body hygiene, so by plucking the hairs out.
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3. or cutting the entire lower tail off, you're putting a handicap on your elephant," Dionne Slagter, Animal Welfare Manager at Animals Asia, told AFP.
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4. With just 80 elephants left in captivity and about 100 in the wild - down from 2,000 in 1990 - Slagter suspects most of the tails are being smuggled from neighboring countries or as far away as Africa.
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5. According to legend, finding a tail feather by chance on the forest floor is considered good luck - local legend has been peddled in recent years by shopkeepers selling yarn, along with ivory jewelry and Buddha statues can go up to $900.
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6. But actively cutting the tail or pulling the hair is never part of the tradition.
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7. the foundation would like to call readers and businesses to join hands to offer Tet gifts to the poor, those hit hard by natural disasters, street children, the blind and victims of human trafficking.
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8. In HCMC, the foundation will focus on offering Tet gifts to women and children that are blind, poor, jobless or homeless.
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9. Now, the foundation is inviting all readers and well-wishers to contribute to its efforts.
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10. Long told an online meeting Friday the southwest border with Cambodia and southwestern provinces of the country, better known as the Mekong Delta region, are now "major hotspots" at high risk of possible Covid-19 outbreaks.
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