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  • Andrew Lancaster's Taxidermy Creations, New Zealand - Aug 2011
    DUKAS_20066825_REX
    Andrew Lancaster's Taxidermy Creations, New Zealand - Aug 2011
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Andrew Lancaster / Rex Features ( 1429055n )
    A chicken with three heads and possum paws
    Andrew Lancaster's Taxidermy Creations, New Zealand - Aug 2011
    FULL WORDS LINK: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/cvvo

    Looking for a new ornament for your home? How about a possum with a doll's head?

    Perhaps a goldfish with a pheasant for a head and feet from a blackbird might look good on your mantelpiece?

    These and other oddities have been created by wacky taxidermist Andrew Lancaster.

    Born in North Yorkshire, but now living in New Zealand, Andrew specialises in creating weird animal hybrids.

    The 53-year-old started taxidermy 14 years ago, after moving from Britain, but only began creating his fantasy creatures in the last two years.

    He explains: "I would see lots of animals by the side of the road and think it was a shame they would be wasted. Now I usually pull over and head back to pick them up. I would never hurt any animals myself"
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Daily Life In Famagusta District
    DUKAS_190280174_NUR
    Daily Life In Famagusta District
    PROTARAS, CYPRUS – OCTOBER 20:
    A cat watches passersby from a shaded spot in Protaras, Famagusta District, Cyprus, on October 20, 2025. (Photo by STR/NurPhoto)

     

  • Daily Life In Famagusta District
    DUKAS_190280171_NUR
    Daily Life In Famagusta District
    PROTARAS, CYPRUS – OCTOBER 20:
    A cat watches passersby from a shaded spot in Protaras, Famagusta District, Cyprus, on October 20, 2025. (Photo by STR/NurPhoto)

     

  • Daily Life In Famagusta District
    DUKAS_190280159_NUR
    Daily Life In Famagusta District
    PROTARAS, CYPRUS – OCTOBER 20:
    A relaxed cat basks on a sunlit path in Protaras, Famagusta District, Cyprus, on October 20, 2025. (Photo by STR/NurPhoto)

     

  • Daily Life In Famagusta District
    DUKAS_190280157_NUR
    Daily Life In Famagusta District
    PROTARAS, CYPRUS – OCTOBER 20:
    A relaxed cat basks on a sunlit path in Protaras, Famagusta District, Cyprus, on October 20, 2025. (Photo by STR/NurPhoto)

     

  • FEATURE - Tierische Weihnachten im Whipsnade Zoo
    DUK10107008_014
    FEATURE - Tierische Weihnachten im Whipsnade Zoo
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Imageplotter/REX/Shutterstock (10037105s)
    Santa Paws comes early. It is the very first Christmas for ZSL Whipsnade Zoo's three six-month-old Amur tiger cubs, Dmitri, Makari and Czars. Keepers at the Zoo have prepared brightly coloured, felt Christmas stockings for the inquisitive youngsters.
    It's a Whipsnade Wonderland for the animals at ZSL Whipsnade Zoo, who are surprised by some tasty treats.
    Animals celebrate Christmas at ZSL Whipsnade Zoo, Bedfordshire, UK - 18 Dec 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Tierische Weihnachten im Whipsnade Zoo
    DUK10107008_013
    FEATURE - Tierische Weihnachten im Whipsnade Zoo
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Imageplotter/REX/Shutterstock (10037105y)
    Santa Paws comes early. It is the very first Christmas for ZSL Whipsnade Zoo's three six-month-old Amur tiger cubs, Dmitri, Makari and Czars. Keepers at the Zoo have prepared brightly coloured, felt Christmas stockings for the inquisitive youngsters.
    It's a Whipsnade Wonderland for the animals at ZSL Whipsnade Zoo, who are surprised by some tasty treats.
    Animals celebrate Christmas at ZSL Whipsnade Zoo, Bedfordshire, UK - 18 Dec 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Tierische Weihnachten im Whipsnade Zoo
    DUK10107008_011
    FEATURE - Tierische Weihnachten im Whipsnade Zoo
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Imageplotter/REX/Shutterstock (10037105p)
    Santa Paws comes early, and inquisitive Dmitri investigates his present up and close. It is the very first Christmas for ZSL Whipsnade Zoo's three six-month-old Amur tiger cubs, Dmitri, Makari and Czars. Keepers at the Zoo have prepared brightly coloured, felt Christmas stockings for the inquisitive youngsters.
    It's a Whipsnade Wonderland for the animals at ZSL Whipsnade Zoo, who are surprised by some tasty treats.
    Animals celebrate Christmas at ZSL Whipsnade Zoo, Bedfordshire, UK - 18 Dec 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Tierische Weihnachten im Whipsnade Zoo
    DUK10107008_008
    FEATURE - Tierische Weihnachten im Whipsnade Zoo
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Imageplotter/REX/Shutterstock (10037105w)
    Santa Paws comes early. It is the very first Christmas for ZSL Whipsnade Zoo's three six-month-old Amur tiger cubs, Dmitri, Makari and Czars. Keepers at the Zoo have prepared brightly coloured, felt Christmas stockings for the inquisitive youngsters.
    It's a Whipsnade Wonderland for the animals at ZSL Whipsnade Zoo, who are surprised by some tasty treats.
    Animals celebrate Christmas at ZSL Whipsnade Zoo, Bedfordshire, UK - 18 Dec 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_015
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182l)
    Lion Cubs
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_014
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182a)
    Marina Georgieva
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_013
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182d)
    Marina Georgieva
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_012
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182c)
    Marina Georgieva
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_011
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182g)
    Marina Georgieva
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_010
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182i)
    Lion Cubs
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_009
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182f)
    Lion Cubs
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_008
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182b)
    Marina Georgieva
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_007
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182e)
    Lion Cubs
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_006
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182n)
    Lion Cubs
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_005
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182m)
    Lion Cubs
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_004
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182o)
    Lion Cubs
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_003
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182k)
    Lion Cubs
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_002
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182j)
    Marina Georgieva
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    DUK10082712_001
    FEATURE - Gerettete Löwenkinder
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (9375182h)
    Lion Cubs
    Rescued Lions, Four Paws, Nijeberkoop, Netherlands - 6 Feb 2018
    GENTLY rubbing his nose against her cheek, lion cub Masoud tenderly nuzzles the woman he has come to think of as his mother.
    Seemingly lost in a revery, Bulgarian vet Dr Marina Ivanova savours the blissful last moments before she is separated from Masoud and his brother Terez.
    As the lively pair of lions playfully wrestle with Marina on the ground of their new enclosure, the special bond they share with her is clear to see.
    Marina, country director of animal charity Four Paws in Bulgaria, has been caring for the two lions since they were born into squalid, unhealthy conditions at an unlicensed zoo in the north-east of her native country.
    There the cubs were in a pride of seven lions bred illegally to be sold on to similar illicit institutions.
    Masoud and Terez, the second generation of an in-bred line, were kept in cramped cages, and their treatment has resulted in the latter suffering a serious bone growth defect in his front legs.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Toy Fair: Spielzeugmesse in London
    DUK10050822_047
    FEATURE - Toy Fair: Spielzeugmesse in London
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Guy Bell/REX/Shutterstock (8002662aq)
    New Minions prison characters from Despicable Me 3 on the Posh Paws stand
    Toy Fair, Olympia, London, UK - 24 Jan 2017
    The London Toy Fair opens at Olympia exhibition centre. Organised by the British Toy and Hobby Association it is the only dedicated toy, game and hobby trade exhibition in the UK. It runs for three days, with more than 240 exhibiting companies ranging from the large internationals to the new start up companies.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Toy Fair: Spielzeugmesse in London
    DUK10050822_046
    FEATURE - Toy Fair: Spielzeugmesse in London
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Guy Bell/REX/Shutterstock (8002662ap)
    The new goat character and Minions beach and prison characters from Despicable Me 3 on the Posh Paws stand
    Toy Fair, Olympia, London, UK - 24 Jan 2017
    The London Toy Fair opens at Olympia exhibition centre. Organised by the British Toy and Hobby Association it is the only dedicated toy, game and hobby trade exhibition in the UK. It runs for three days, with more than 240 exhibiting companies ranging from the large internationals to the new start up companies.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_024
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_021
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_020
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys and other animals at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_019
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_018
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_017
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_016
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_015
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_014
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys and other animals at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_013
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys and other animals at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_012
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_011
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_010
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_008
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_007
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_006
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_005
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys and other animals at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_004
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_003
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_002
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    DUK10033890_001
    NEWS - Tierschützer retten verwahrloste Tiere aus dem Zoo in Gaza
    August 23, 2016 - Khan Younis, Gaza - Members of Four Paws International check monkeys at a zoo in the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis. A group of veterinarians appointed by Austrian-headquartered group Four Paws came to Gaza to treat animals from the ''South Zoo'', which was damaged in Israeli attacks on Gaza. The rescued animals will be transported to a rescue center in Jordan as the zoo doesn't have the ability to give them proper care, according to the zoo owner (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • Mewgaroo Hoodie by UniHabitat lets you carry pets around, Japan, May 2015
    DUKAS_50487199_REX
    Mewgaroo Hoodie by UniHabitat lets you carry pets around, Japan, May 2015
    MANDATORY CREDIT: UniHabitat/REX Shutterstock. Only for use in story about UniHabitat's Mewgaroo hoodie. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission.
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by UniHabitat/REX Shutterstock (4786592k)
    The Mewgaroo Hoodie with cat ears and paws
    Mewgaroo Hoodie by UniHabitat lets you carry pets around, Japan, May 2015
    FULL BODY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/qflh

    A Japanese company has created a fabulous new hoodie that allows you to carry around your cat, or any small pet wherever you go.

    The Mewgaroo hoodie should fit any small pet, and is the perfect place for your cat or small dog to snuggle up to you.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Mewgaroo Hoodie by UniHabitat lets you carry pets around, Japan, May 2015
    DUKAS_50487195_REX
    Mewgaroo Hoodie by UniHabitat lets you carry pets around, Japan, May 2015
    MANDATORY CREDIT: UniHabitat/REX Shutterstock. Only for use in story about UniHabitat's Mewgaroo hoodie. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission.
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by UniHabitat/REX Shutterstock (4786592j)
    The Mewgaroo Hoodie with cat ears and paws
    Mewgaroo Hoodie by UniHabitat lets you carry pets around, Japan, May 2015
    FULL BODY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/qflh

    A Japanese company has created a fabulous new hoodie that allows you to carry around your cat, or any small pet wherever you go.

    The Mewgaroo hoodie should fit any small pet, and is the perfect place for your cat or small dog to snuggle up to you.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • FOX's Cause For Paws: An All-Star Dog Spectacular, Los Angeles, America - 22 Nov 2013
    DUKAS_45176091_REX
    FOX's Cause For Paws: An All-Star Dog Spectacular, Los Angeles, America - 22 Nov 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by MediaPunch/REX (4267247k)
    Gavin Degraw
    FOX's Cause For Paws: An All-Star Dog Spectacular, Los Angeles, America - 22 Nov 2013

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

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