Illegally jailed at the Bronx Zoo? Court to weigh Happy the Elephant's
rights
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[May 18, 2022] By
Luc Cohen
(Reuters) - Should a female elephant have
some of the same legal rights as humans?
That is the question New York state's top court will consider on
Wednesday, the latest development in a years-long push by an animal
rights group to free Happy the Elephant from the Bronx Zoo.
The 51-year-old Asian elephant has called the world-famous zoo home
since 1977.
But four years ago, the Nonhuman Rights Project began asking New York
courts to release Happy to one of two elephant sanctuaries in the United
States, saying she was being illegally imprisoned.
The group said Happy was entitled to habeas corpus, a legal process in
which illegally detained people or someone acting on their behalf may
inquire about the reason they are being held.
New York law does not define "person," and the group said Happy should
be recognized as one.
"Elephants are autonomous beings who possess complex cognitive
abilities," the group wrote in a 2018 petition. "Happy's interest in
exercising that autonomy and bodily liberty is as fundamental to her as
it is to us."
Happy has been kept alone in a one-acre (0.4-hectare)enclosure at the
zoo since around 2006, court records show. Elephants are gregarious and
family-oriented animals with complex social lives.
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An elephant named Happy is pictured in the Bronx Zoo, in New York
City, New York, U.S., in this undated social media photo. Gigi
Glendinning/via REUTERS
Her longtime companion, Grumpy, was attacked by two
other elephants earlier that decade. He never recovered from his
injuries and was euthanized. Another of Happy's companions, Sammie,
later died.
Prior efforts to grant legal personhood to animals, including
chimpanzees, have been unsuccessful.
The Bronx Zoo, run by the Wildlife Conservation Society, says Happy
is well cared for, and moving her to a sanctuary would not serve her
interests.
Jim Breheny, the zoo's director, has said the push to grant habeas
corpus rights to animals "demeans all the people who have sought
such relief."
A New York trial court in February 2020 dismissed the original
petition, calling Happy an "intelligent, autonomous being" who "may
be entitled to liberty," but not legally a person. An appeals court
later upheld that ruling.
The hearing in front of the Albany-based Court of Appeals, a
seven-member panel which generally focuses on issues of law rather
than individual factual disputes, is scheduled for 2 p.m.(1800 GMT).
(Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder and
Sandra Maler)
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