50 Years of Disaster Response

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We've launched a new interactive archive, with photos, videos and statistics from our 50 years of disaster response work

This year, we are reflecting on our 50 years of disaster work and celebrating how protecting animals helps communities to re-build.

To mark the occasion, we have launched an interactive archive, pulling together photos, videos and statistics from our 50 years of disaster work.

Many of the world’s poorest people are completely reliant on animals for food, transport and income. We work with these communities to both protect animals and to build a sustainable future in the event of further disasters.

In March 1964 we received a letter from officials in Surinam asking for our assistance in rescuing thousands of animals trapped by rising water behind the newly created Afobaka dam. In the 18 months that followed, John Walsh and a team of 42 members of the local community, rescued 10,000 wild animals from flood water.

Known as ‘Operation Gwamba’, the intervention marked the first of hundreds of disaster relief missions to come.

Since 1964, we have worked throughout the world to protect animals caught in disasters. From Mexico to Indonesia, our disaster response team of highly skilled specialists has deployed to protect animals in need.

Discover 50 years of disaster response around the world, with our new interactive archive

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Quick facts

We have worked in Disaster Zones since 1964, when thousands of animals became trapped by rising water behind the Afobaka dam.
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John Walsh and a team of 42 members of the local community rescued 10,000 wild animals from flood water in Surinam in Operation Gwamba.
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