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Baby elephant nursed back to health at Myanmar sanctuary

FILE PHOTO: A camp staff feeds Ayeyar Sein, a four-month-old baby elephant who lost her parents to poachers, after her daily wound cleaning in Wingabaw Elephant Camp, Bago, Myanmar, September 30, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Wang

BAGO, Myanmar (Reuters) - Baby elephant Ayeyar Sein trumpets impatiently as a vet prepares her milk bottle and walks cautiously, her front left leg in a splint made of bamboo and cloth bandages.

The four-month-old calf was rescued from a hunter's snare trap in the forest of Myanmar's southwest Ayeyarwaddy region last month and is now being looked after by staff at the Wingabaw elephant sanctuary, an hour's drive northeast of Yangon.

"When she arrived at the camp last month, her leg was terribly sore", said Than Naing Oo, the camp veterinarian, as he cleaned the injury. "Now she is getting better as we treat her with medicine twice a day."

FILE PHOTO: A camp staff feeds Ayeyar Sein, a four-month-old baby elephant who lost her parents to poachers, after her daily wound cleaning in Wingabaw Elephant Camp, Bago, Myanmar, September 30, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Wang

Than Naing Oo said Ayeyar Sein's parents were nowhere to be seen near the trap and were most likely killed by poachers. Poachers kill elephants for their tusks and skin, which are used to make jewelry and traditional medicine, among other things.

"The big challenge for us in taking care of baby elephants is to keep them alive", said Shwe Yi Win Htet, manager at the camp, adding that two young elephants had died in their care.

"They do not have mothers to feed them and are instead fed with powdered milk. That's why all of us are looking after them very carefully. Our priority is to prolong their lives", she said.

FILE PHOTO: A staff member feeds milk to Ayeyar Sein in Wingabaw Elephant Camp, Bago, Myanmar, September 27, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Wang

Officials named the four-month-old calf Ayeyar Sein in accordance with the tradition of giving orphans the first name of the state where they are found.

Wingabaw elephant camp is a government-owned shelter and 20 elephants rescued from similar situations are currently kept there. Eight are orphaned baby elephants.

Ayeyar Sein will be raised with the other orphans in the camp after her injury has healed.       

FILE PHOTO: Ayeyar Sein, a four-month-old baby elephant who lost her parents to poachers, rests after her daily wound cleaning in Wingabaw Elephant Camp, Bago, Myanmar, September 30, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Wang

There are about 1,400 to 2,000 elephants left in the wild in Myanmar, while 5,000 are in captivity, according to a 2018 Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute report, which highlights elephant poaching as an emerging crisis in the Southeast Asian country.

(Reporting by Zaw Naing Oo; Editing by Karishma Singh and Gareth Jones)

FILE PHOTO: A camp staff comforts Ayeyar Sein, a four-month-old baby elephant who lost her parents to poachers, during her daily wound cleaning in Wingabaw Elephant Camp, Bago, Myanmar, September 30, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Wang
FILE PHOTO: Ayeyar Sein, a four-month-old baby elephant who lost her parents to poachers, is led by her mahout to get her daily wound cleaning in Wingabaw Elephant Camp, Bago, Myanmar, September 30, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Wang
FILE PHOTO: Staff clean Ayeyar Sein's wound at Wingabaw Elephant Camp, Bago, Myanmar, September 30, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Wang
FILE PHOTO: A camp staff comforts Ayeyar Sein, a four-month-old baby elephant who lost her parents to poachers, during her daily wound cleaning in Wingabaw Elephant Camp, Bago, Myanmar, September 30, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Wang
FILE PHOTO: A vet takes photos of the injured foot of Ayeyar Sein, a four-month-old baby elephant who lost her parents to poachers, during her daily wound cleaning in Wingabaw Elephant Camp, Bago, Myanmar, September 30, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Wang
FILE PHOTO: A camp staff examines the injured foot of Ayeyar Sein, a four-month-old baby elephant who lost her parents to poachers, during her daily wound cleaning in Wingabaw Elephant Camp, Bago, Myanmar, September 30, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Wang
FILE PHOTO: Staff members prepare Ayeyar Sein, a four-month-old baby elephant who lost her parents to poachers, for her daily wound cleaning in Wingabaw Elephant Camp, Bago, Myanmar, September 30, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Wang
FILE PHOTO: A staff member prepares to feed milk to the orphan elephants in Wingabaw Elephant Camp, Bago, Myanmar, September 27, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Wang
FILE PHOTO: Bandages used to dress the wounds of Ayeyar Sein, a four-month-old baby elephant who lost her parents to poachers, are hung up to dry in Wingabaw Elephant Camp, Bago, Myanmar, September 30, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Wang
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