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View Full Version : U.S. GIs to Help Rescue Ethiopia Cheetahs



rocket13
11-26-2005, 02:58 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051126/ap_on_re_af/ethiopia_cheetahs

Two endangered cheetah cubs held captive and abused at a remote village restaurant are to be rescued by an Ethiopian veterinarian and U.S. soldiers, an environmental official said.

Befekadu Refera, an official of the national Environmental Protection Agency, said the veterinarian would take the cheetahs away from Gode on Saturday and hand them to U.S. troops for safekeeping until the animals are flown to the capital, Addis Ababa.

"The U.S. Army will not take the cheetahs without Ethiopian officials being present," Befekadu told The Associated Press. "The vet will give some medical treatment to the animals and then on Monday or Tuesday they will flown to Addis Ababa courtesy of the U.S Army."

The plight of the cubs has gathered international attention since American soldiers, part of the U.S. counterterrorism task force for the Horn of Africa, last month discovered the animals tied up and being forced to fight each other for the amusement of patrons at the Gode restaurant. One cheetah has an eye infection and may be blind.

The soldiers tried to persuade restaurant owner Mohamed Hudle to hand over the cubs to wildlife officials. Mohamed refused, saying he wanted $1,000 for each cheetah — 10 times the average income in this impoverished nation of 77 million people.

The soldiers also contacted U.S.-based cheetah experts as well as Ethiopian authorities, who have intervened. The U.S. military refused to comment officially on the cheetah rescue effort, but its role was confirmed by the restaurant owner, the Ethiopian EPA and the U.S.-founded international Cheetah Conservation Fund, based in Namibia.

In a statement on its Web site, the Cheetah Conservation Fund said that U.S. soldiers learned about the cheetahs when the restaurant owner brought the animals for medical treatment to a U.S. military housing compound in Gode.

The soldiers checked up on the cubs over the following weeks and discovered they were being mistreated. An AP reporter who visited the village saw the restaurant owner's sons, ages 4 and 2, pulling the cubs' tails and dragging them around by ropes tied tightly to their necks. Other children followed, poking and teasing the frightened animals.

"I don't see why I should hand them over," the owner, Mohamed, told AP. "When I was younger I looked after goats and camels, so I know what animals need."

Mohamed, 43, said he bought the cubs from poachers, who had kicked the female cub in the face, blinding the animal.

The cheetah is endangered because of loss of habitat, poaching and other factors, according to the Cheetah Conservation Fund. Keeping wild animals is illegal without a special license, but Ethiopia's wildlife laws are rarely enforced. Mohamed also has a hawk with a broken wing and three malnourished baby ostriches.

Befekadu, of the EPA, said once the cubs are brought to the capital, they would be cared for on the large grounds of the National Palace, home to several Abyssinian lions rescued by former Emperor Haile Selassie.

rocket13
11-26-2005, 03:01 PM
U.S. troops, Ethiopians work to recover endangered cubs

GODE, Ethiopia — U.S. soldiers discovered two endangered cheetah cubs being held captive and abused in a restaurant in this dusty, remote Ethiopian village and have launched a campaign for the animals’ rescue.

The 3-month-old cubs were being forced to fight each other for the amusement of patrons at a Gode restaurant; one cheetah was blind, possibly from poachers who kicked the animal in the face.

The soldiers, part of the U.S. counterterrorism task force for the Horn of Africa, discovered the cubs last month. They provided medical treatment to the blinded cub, fed both animals and tried to persuade restaurant owner Mohamed Hudle to hand them over to wildlife officials.

The soldiers also contacted U.S.-based cheetah experts as well as Ethiopian authorities.

Befekadu Refera, an official of the national Environmental Protection Agency in the capital, Addis Ababa, confirmed that the U.S. military had contacted his agency about the cubs and had offered to fly the pair to Addis Ababa, 684 miles away, for care. The U.S. military refused to comment.

The owner, however, was refusing to hand over the cubs unless paid $1,000 for each — 10 times the average income in this impoverished nation of 77 million people.

“I don’t see why I should hand them over,’’ Hudle told The Associated Press on Wednesday. “When I was younger, I looked after goats and camels, so I know what animals need.’’

His sons, 4 and 2, pulled the cubs’ tails and dragged them around by ropes tied tightly to their necks. Other children followed, poking and teasing the frightened animals.

Mohamed, 43, said he bought the cubs from poachers, who had kicked the female cub in the face, blinding the animal.

The cheetah is endangered because of loss of habitat, poaching and other factors, according to the international Cheetah Conservation Fund. Keeping wild animals is illegal without a special license, but Ethiopia’s wildlife laws are rarely enforced.

rocket13
11-26-2005, 03:03 PM
I say shoot the guy and take the cheetah anyway. Thats seems a fair deal to me. Or maybe force him to fight to the death against a full grown cheetah.

Kingswat
11-26-2005, 03:22 PM
I say shoot the guy and take the cheetah anyway. Thats seems a fair deal to me. Or maybe force him to fight to the death against a full grown cheetah.


Only shoot him after he gives the names and location of the poachers.

usm2b
11-26-2005, 10:26 PM
This kind of stuff makes me mad... I obviously don't know how the world works but how can the President put soldiers to use in this situation(which is a good cause don't get me wrong) but deny the use of force in places like the Sudan...it doesn't make sense to me.

Creeper
11-26-2005, 11:02 PM
The human element will ruin this world/planet.
Good on those troopersfor what they did.

rocket13
11-27-2005, 12:44 AM
The human element will ruin this world/planet.
Good on those troopersfor what they did.


The animals are not safe yet, personally I would just take the animals away from him by force.

rocket13
11-27-2005, 12:47 AM
This kind of stuff makes me mad... I obviously don't know how the world works but how can the President put soldiers to use in this situation(which is a good cause don't get me wrong) but deny the use of force in places like the Sudan...it doesn't make sense to me.


Because you pick and choose your battles. As noble as the sudan would be it, wasn't in the best interest of the USA.

joe mama
11-27-2005, 12:50 AM
I'm reminded of a funny part of a Howard Stern show long ago. They were talking about having watched a cable special about the different ways different cultures treat animals. A woman called in all pissed off about how the show showed Chinese people eating dogs and throwing live cats in boiling oil and skinning them alive. She wanted to know why our government, which was quick to send troops to Panama and Kuwait and Somali and Haiti (this was in the 90's) wasn't doing anything to stop them from treating the poor dogs and cats this way. She thought we should bomb them or something...to which Howard pointed out that if we bomb them, we'll be killing the dogs and cats too...so her suggestion was to send in the Marines first to rescue the cats and dogs, THEN we could bomb the area to kill the cruel people.

joe mama
11-27-2005, 12:51 AM
Because you pick and choose your battles. As noble as the sudan would be it, wasn't in the best interest of the USA.

And 20 minutes after we left, they'd be slaughtering each other again.

pathfinder82
11-27-2005, 01:00 AM
Personally the thing that gets me going the most is animal cruelty.

I thought for a time of getting into anti cruelty law enforcement after I retired from the Army. I didnt because I would have most likley ended up in prison for killing some of these people out there.

I also recently looked into a security job guarding veterinarians from poachers but again I would end up in some foreign prison most likely.

I just cant wrap my mind around the way some humans act, it truly drives me to the edge. Worst are the rich people who think that having an endangred animals head on their wall somehow makes their lives complete.

Where the hell is Ted Nugent when I have the urge to punch something.

morkev
12-01-2005, 04:09 AM
Personally the thing that gets me going the most is animal cruelty.

I thought for a time of getting into anti cruelty law enforcement after I retired from the Army. I didnt because I would have most likley ended up in prison for killing some of these people out there.

I also recently looked into a security job guarding veterinarians from poachers but again I would end up in some foreign prison most likely.

I just cant wrap my mind around the way some humans act, it truly drives me to the edge. Worst are the rich people who think that having an endangred animals head on their wall somehow makes their lives complete.

Where the hell is Ted Nugent when I have the urge to punch something.



I totally agree. I was thinking of getting involved too but I would be on the run for mass murder.

annihilation
12-01-2005, 11:49 AM
I totally agree. I was thinking of getting involved too but I would be on the run for mass murder.

I'd have to agree..

dangerclose
12-01-2005, 04:52 PM
...so her suggestion was to send in the Marines first to rescue the cats and dogs, THEN we could bomb the area to kill the cruel people.


Sounds like a plan.

:)

morkev
12-02-2005, 03:21 AM
Sounds like a plan.

:)


aw hell......................count me in.p-)

annihilation
12-02-2005, 11:29 AM
Sounds like a plan.

:)

Remember we are have to protect the innocent, and you can't get anymore innocent than animals.