The
only working elephant in the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh, has been
blessed by monks ahead of her official retirement after more than 30
years of giving rides to tourists.
The female elephant has been a regular at the Wat Phnom temple since 1980.She has not worked since 2012 because of a combination of a foot infection and complaints from officials that she caused traffic jams.
Cambodia has 78 domesticated and 400 wild elephants, conservationists say.
Asian elephants are classified as an endangered species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
'A younger sister' The retiring elephant will exchange the busy and congested streets of the Cambodian capital for an ecotourism venture in a protected area of forestry in the north-east of the country.
Her handlers say that her retirement there has been made possible by international donations and that she will be allowed to wander freely along with nine other elephants.
Owner Sin Sorn said he would miss her very much.
"I am getting old. So I decided she needed to be with nature... I am going to miss her very much."
He has been with the elephant since his family caught her in the jungle aged eight.
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