In a tiny cage, a baboon  sits, picking seeds off the floor, desperately eating whatever he can  find. Next to the baboon, the carcass of his mate and five offspring lay  in the pen, decomposing in the August heat.
"Eight to 10 monkeys were  killed," says Abu Sameer, the zoo's chief veterinarian. "Also a  peacock, a gazelle, a lion, and a fox."
The carcasses of dead  animals, mostly monkeys, lay scattered across the scorched grass between  the pens. In one of the cages, a dead peacock lays in front of two  hungry lions. In another, a crocodile lounges in the hot sun; there is  almost no water in the enclosure, which also holds a pelican and a duck.
The zoo, part of the  Al-Bisan recreational park in Jabalya, northern Gaza, was hit multiple  times during the recent conflict between Israel and Hamas militants.
The sights at the Gaza zoo couldn't be sadder. 
In a tiny cage, a baboon  sits, picking seeds off the floor, desperately eating whatever he can  find. Next to the baboon, the carcass of his mate and five offspring lay  in the pen, decomposing in the August heat.
"Eight to 10 monkeys were  killed," says Abu Sameer, the zoo's chief veterinarian. "Also a  peacock, a gazelle, a lion, and a fox."
The carcasses of dead  animals, mostly monkeys, lay scattered across the scorched grass between  the pens. In one of the cages, a dead peacock lays in front of two  hungry lions. In another, a crocodile lounges in the hot sun; there is  almost no water in the enclosure, which also holds a pelican and a duck.
The zoo, part of the  Al-Bisan recreational park in Jabalya, northern Gaza, was hit multiple  times during the recent conflict between Israel and Hamas militants.






 
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