The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, November 30, 2005, Page 5, Image 5
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U.S. troops fly rescued cheetah cubs to safety in Ethiopian capital
Anthony IMchell
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia —
U.S. troops flew two
endangered cheetah cubs to the
Ethiopian capital Tuesday after
instigating their rescue from a
remote village where a
restaurant owner had held them
captive and abused them.
The male and female cubs
were released on the grounds of
the Ethiopian presidents
official residence after their
680-mile journey from the
eastern hamlet of Gode.
“This is the first kind of
rescue of animals, let alone
cheetahs, that we have done,”
said Sgt. Leah Cobble, 26, of
Washington, as she cuddled the
two purring cubs on the
runway of Bole International
Airport before handing them to
government veterinarian
Fekadu Shiferaw.
The saga of the cubs started
last month when U.S.
counterterrorism troops,
carrying out humanitarian
work in the Gode region,
discovered that the animals’
owner was keeping them tied
up with ropes around their
necks at his restaurant and
forcing them to fight each other
for the amusement of patrons
and village children. One cub is
blind in one eye.
The soldiers alerted the
Ethiopian government and a
U.S.-based cheetah rescue
organization, drawing
international attention to the
cubs’ plight. They also tried to
persuade restaurant owner
Mohamed Hudle to hand over
the cubs, but he wanted $1,000
for each animal.
Fekadu, the veterinarian,
intervened. He flew to the
village Saturday, confiscated the
cubs, and handed them over to
U.S. forces for Tuesday’s
transport. The vet said
Mohamed was not paid for the
animals and that both had
received antibiotic treatment
and appeared in good health.
“Had we not had the help of
the U.S. military, it would not
have been possible to rescue
these animals,” Fekadu said
after arriving with the cubs
aboard the U.S. plane.
The cheetah is endangered
worldwide because of loss of
«*•
habitat, poaching and other
factors, according to the Ohio
based Cheetah Conservation
Fund.
Keeping wild animals is
illegal without a license, but
Ethiopia’s wildlife laws are
rarely enforced. Fekadu said the
cubs eventually may have been
sent to the Middle East as part
of the wildlife trafficking trade
in this part of Africa.
Mohamed said he bought the
cubs from poachers who had
kicked the female cub in the
face, blinding her.
The cubs will now live at the
National Palace, home to
President Girma Woldegirogis,
along with three rescued lions
and some vervet monkeys.
Palace animal keeper Kura
Tulu said financial help may be
needed to give the cubs the best
of care. There is only an annual
budget of $3,500 to look after
all the animals at the palace,
Kura said.
Boris Heger / The Associated Press
A baby cheetah named Patch by U.S. soldiers takes a rest in the
arms of Ethiopian government veterinarian Fekadu Shiferaw as his
brother watches on in background, upon their arrival at the
National Palace on Tuesday in Addis Ababa.
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