Ontario Man Ordered to Remove Pet Tigers from Property
Summary:
ONTARIO, CANADA – A southern Ontario man has been ordered to remove two tigers from a residential property after local officials refused to grant an exemption to the town’s exotic animal bylaw. Zohaib Masood has been keeping the two sub-adult tigers on a former mushroom farm in Wainfleet, Ont., in the Niagara Region since last fall. The township’s council voted this week to deny his request to keep the animals, and Masood has been told the tigers must be relocated by Monday.
Mayor Brian Grant said the decision was based on public safety concerns. “The obvious fear is what happens if these animals escape,” Grant said Friday. “He’s in a residential area. We’re talking homes everywhere, so that’s obviously our No. 1 concern.” Grant said the township does not have the resources to deal with a situation involving escaped tigers. Masood said the animals were kept behind multiple layers of fencing designed to prevent them from getting out. Some of the barriers reach 16 feet high, while others are 13 feet high with an inward-leaning section and steel reinforcement driven into the ground.
The two tigers, named Jagger and Aspen, are hybrids of Bengal and Siberian tigers. Jagger weighs about 350 pounds and Aspen about 250 pounds, according to Masood. Both animals are about a year old and could eventually grow to 500 or 600 pounds. Masood said he rescued the animals from owners in Ontario who obtained them as pets but later could not manage them. Masood said he is now working to find another location for the animals but had not finalized a destination as of Saturday.
Town officials said the bylaw banning tigers and other dangerous animals was adopted in 2018 after previous incidents involving escaped animals at a facility known as Ringtail Ranch and Rescue.
The situation is also tied to a separate legal dispute involving other animals kept at the property. A white tiger cub named Atlas and a spotted hyena named Marilyn were seized from the site last November by Ontario Animal Welfare Services. Authorities said the animals were not receiving proper care. The animals are currently being held at Safari Niagara Zoological Park while the case proceeds. Masood said he plans to challenge the decision in provincial court.
Action take by Born Free USA:
Notes: