Animals evacuated this week from a zoo dubbed the "world's worst" in the Palestinian Gaza Strip have arrived at an animal shelter in Jordan, an AFP photographer said on Thursday.
Two turtles, two eagles, two porcupines, a pelican, an emu and a deer arrived late on Wednesday near Amman after travelling from Gaza via Israel, said Amir Khalil, a vet from the charity organising the transfer.
Animal welfare charity Four Paws on Wednesday said it evacuated 15 animals -- including Gaza's last tiger Laziz -- out of the Khan Younis zoo, as they headed for a new life outside the Israeli-blockaded territory.
The tiger was put on a plane and flown to South Africa where it arrived on Thursday, while five monkeys remained in Israel, Khalil said.



An emu sits inside its enclosure at the New Hope Centre.

The animals that arrived in Jordan were placed in quarantine at the New Hope Centre, a shelter near Amman, "while waiting to be transferred somewhere bigger", the vet said.
The animals would now have access to food and necessary treatment, Khalil said.
Dozens of animals had died at the Khan Younis zoo, some of starvation, and badly stuffed bodies of dead crocodiles, lions and others were left in the open, surrounded by piles of bones.
Four Paws says on its website that Khan Younis had "been known as the 'worst zoo in the world' since it became public last year that the zoo was crudely mummifying the animals that died in their care and displaying them."
There were more than 100 animals housed at the zoo in the years after its 2007 opening, but they were decimated by repeated wars and shortages of customers.
The Israeli blockade of the enclave and Egypt's closed border have suffocated its economy, making it increasingly hard for Gazans to find money for leisure.
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