This Article is From Jan 17, 2016

World's First Zoo Backed By World Bank In This Indian City

World's First Zoo Backed By World Bank In This Indian City

The zoo houses 170 different species of animals on its 250-hectare campus.

Visakhapatnam: As an addition in the portfolio of its urban regeneration projects, the World Bank is extending an assistance of $20 million to help reconstruct the Indira Gandhi Zoological Park (IGZP) in Visakhapatnam.

The assistance to the zoo, which was devastated during cyclone Hudhud, is part of the $370 million Andhra Pradesh Disaster Recovery Project.

The much-loved Vizag zoo is nestled in the picturesque Eastern Ghats. It sees an annual footfall of about 8 lakh people and was set up in 1972 and shot into fame because it had some aviaries designed by the legendary ornithologist Salim Ali, the 'bird man of India'.

Neha Vyas, senior environment specialist at the India country office of the World Bank who is actively involved in this eco-development project, asserts that this is "the very first time in the history of the World Bank that it is directly involved in a zoo".

The Vizag zoo houses 170 different species of animals on its 250-hectare campus. Only a road separates the zoo from the sea and this became its undoing, when Hudhud struck the region it caused huge damage to the entire zoo.
 

According to a damages needs assessment report by the World Bank, almost 40 per cent of the trees of the complex were flattened and a larger number were damaged. Some 180 birds and animals escaped from their enclosures as the cages were badly damaged and 11 animals died due to the cyclone. Out of 67 enclosures about 57 suffered damages.

"Unfortunately for the zoo, the eye of the cyclone Hudhud passed right over it causing widespread devastation in the zoological park," says Vyas.

The enclosures for tiger, python and the white tiger were severely damaged. The offices including the veterinary hospital were also affected and the compound wall was breached in several places. The adjoining Kambalakonda Wildlife Sanctuary was also damaged.

Cyclone Hudhud was classed in the "very severe" category and it crashed into Andhra Pradesh on October 12, 2014. Sixty-one people lost their lives in the natural calamity.
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