Calgary Thai tiger temple defender yanks support as new details surface - Action News
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Calgary Thai tiger temple defender yanks support as new details surface

A vocal defender of Thailand's Tiger Temple says he is pulling his support after new information make the allegations he once dismissed, far more likely.

I now feel deceived by someone I trusted, Gary Agnew says

Calgarian Gary Agnew came to the defence of the Thai tiger temple Wednesday. He now says, based on new information, he feels deceived. (Monty Kruger/CBC)

WARNING: This story contains a disturbing image.


A vocal defender of the Thailand tiger temple says he is pulling his support after new information make the allegations he once dismissed, far more likely.

The Buddhist temple in Kanchanaburi province west of Bangkok came under fire early this week as local wildlife authorities discovered 40 tiger cub carcasses in a freezer.

Live animals were removed in response to international pressure over suspected trafficking and abuse.

Calgarian Gary Agnew came to the defence of the temple, questioning the motives of the Department of National Parks (DNP) and saying the dead cubs were being stored at the temple for research on the direction of the temple's former vet.

In this photo released by the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation, the remains of tiger cubs and a bear are laid out at the "Tiger Temple" in Saiyok district in Kanchanaburi province, west of Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday. Authorities have found 40 dead tiger cubs in a freezer at a Buddhist temple that operated as an admission-charging zoo. (Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation/Associated Press)

Agnew developed an affinity for tigers when he sat on the Calgary Zoo's board of directors for nine years. He visited the temple often to conduct research.

Agnew also said the DNP wasaware of the dead cubs, something the department denied.

He said Wednesday, in his frequent trips to the temple, he had not observed behaviour to support the allegations the temple is currently facing.

Agnew announced his change of heart in a Facebook post Friday, based on new information.

'Revealed our darkest fears'

"I must confess that the actions of a temple staff member and that of several monks this week revealed our darkest fears," Agnew said in the post.

"In fact, they solidified the legitimacy of some of the rumours and allegations that there were indeed inappropriate actions by the monks and other leaders of the temple."

Thai police stopped a truck Thursday carrying two tiger skins and other animal parts as it was leaving a Buddhist temple where monks have been accused of being involved in illegal wildlife trafficking, a police officer said.

A sedated tiger is stretchered as officials start moving tigers from Thailand's controversial Tiger Temple, a popular tourist destination which has come under fire in recent years over the welfare of its big cats in Kanchanaburi province, west of Bangkok, Thailand, Monday. (Chaiwat Subprasom/Reuters)

Two men in the truck were arrested and charged with possession of illegal wildlife, said police Col. Bandith Meungsukhum. He said a monk travelling with them will be arrested once he is defrocked.

"For me, being a strong proponent of the Tiger temple this discovery is not only humbling, but disillusioning," Agnew wrote.

'I now feel deceived'

"I have zero tolerance for animal abuse, and faced with irrefutable indicators of inappropriate behavior, I now feel deceived by someone I trusted and believed in as a spiritual leader," he said of the Abbott, the temple's spiritual leader.

An adult tiger skin can fetch anywhere from $6,000 to $10,000, according to Steve Galster, the director of Freeland, an organization that fights wildlife trafficking.

Authorities this week have been transferring the temple's 137 tigers to animal shelters after obtaining a court order.

The temple is a popular tourist attraction that charged admission for visitors to take photos with tigers.

With files from Thomson Reuters, Associated Press and CBC's Monty Kruger