Elephant Mali, who was the star attraction at Manila Zoo for four decades, died on Tuesday. Tributes have poured in for the elephant christened by activists as one of the world's «saddest». Announcing Mali's death in a Facebook video, Manila Mayor Honey Lacuna said visits to the zoo to see Mali were among her happiest childhood memories. She was seen last Friday constantly rubbing her trunk against a wall. Manila Zoo's Chief Veterinarian Dr Heinrich Patrick Peaa-Domingo said that it indicated that the Asian elephant was in pain.
Mali was seen on Tuesday lying on her side and breathing heavily. Veterinarians told BBC that he administered antihistamines and vitamins, but she died later that afternoon. An autopsy has confirmed that she had cancer in some of her organs, as well as a blockage in her aorta.
Her full name was Vishwa Ma'ali. The Sri Lankan government gifted her to Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos in 1981, when she was 11 months old. Manila Zoo was home to another elephant, Shiva, who arrived there in 1977 and died in 1990. Mali had been the zoo's only elephant since Shiva's death. When pandemic Corona hit the Philippines, the Manila Zoo served as a vaccination site for children, where Mali kept them entertained.
As Mali lived alone in the zoo for a long time, it attracted the attention of animal lovers. One of them was Sir Paul McCartney, who asked authorities to transfer Mali to an elephant sanctuary. He wrote a letter to then President Benigno Aquino III in 2012 and described footage he saw of Mali in captivity as «heartbreaking».
Sir Paul McCartney wrote in the letter, «I am writing to add my voice to the many