• 3 years ago
Freya the walrus was an internet favorite … Until the Norwegian authorities decided to kill her.

Here's what happened ...

Category

🐳
Animals
Transcript
00:00Well, it's a positive thing that people were very fond of her, but it's a negative thing
00:08that people had to go close to her and couldn't leave her alone, because that was the background
00:14for the directorate of fisheries to kill her.
00:17So Freyja Valåsen is right next door to where we have the cabin, and we're going to check if she's still down there.
00:32Freyja was a young walrus, and this walrus had traveled to Scotland, England, the Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden.
00:39They live in packs as social animals in Svalbard and in the Arctic, but it's not unusual for
00:46young animals to take tours, to look for new habitats.
00:51In the Netherlands, she was sleeping on the marine vessels from the army, and was given
00:57this name Freyja.
00:58Obviously, she was welcomed in all of the countries she had been visiting, and it's
01:05only in Norway that she was described as a problem.
01:08When she first appeared on the south coast, there was a politician who said that she should
01:18be euthanized, but then the directorate of fisheries said that it was not necessary to
01:22euthanize her.
01:23They would not consider euthanizing her.
01:32She ate mollusks, and rested on boats and rested on docks.
01:41She didn't harm anyone, but sometimes people would jump out in the water when she was there,
01:48and then she was very close to people, and people were also gathering very closely around
01:54her, and people were also seen throwing stones and sticks or beating her with sticks, etc.
02:02Suddenly, they said that maybe if people do not keep the distance, they would have to
02:06euthanize her.
02:07As soon as they said that, obviously, both a lot of biologists and NOAA and other volunteers
02:14offered an array of other solutions, for instance, giving people who disturbed her fines for
02:22not keeping to the advice of keeping their distance.
02:26Also, there were suggestions on the table for moving her, which would have been possible,
02:33but the directorate then took this decision without proper procedure, in our opinion,
02:41and suddenly on Sunday morning, she was dead.
02:43It could have been avoided if people had followed the suggestions we have come up with,
02:49but of course, it is complicated with a large wild animal in the most remote areas of Norway.
02:57This is a mollusk that is far from its natural habitat, and then there were many situations
03:07that were risky, and we were happy to follow the steps we have taken.
03:11She was a threatened animal, she was red-listed as vulnerable or threatened on the Norwegian
03:17red list, and the killing could only be justified in an emergency situation or for animal welfare
03:27reasons, and there were no such animal welfare or emergency reasons.
03:32I think Freya became a symbol for many people.
03:35People were very fascinated that a wild animal like her would trust people to come so close
03:43and to be able to study her, but now she is actually more of a symbol than she was alive,
03:49because now she is really a symbol of people not being able to take the proper care and
03:58proper consideration for wild animals.

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