The Prague Post - End of the road in Colombia for Escobar's 'cocaine' hippos?

EUR -
AED 4.199862
AFN 80.043816
ALL 97.70498
AMD 438.408229
ANG 2.046469
AOA 1048.57472
ARS 1357.862336
AUD 1.759964
AWG 2.058271
AZN 1.94751
BAM 1.957878
BBD 2.309021
BDT 139.766542
BGN 1.95518
BHD 0.43105
BIF 3361.842712
BMD 1.143484
BND 1.469115
BOB 7.902147
BRL 6.385898
BSD 1.143699
BTN 98.045083
BWP 15.268742
BYN 3.742559
BYR 22412.284747
BZD 2.297168
CAD 1.562765
CDF 3294.376841
CHF 0.938569
CLF 0.027735
CLP 1064.30891
CNY 8.205668
CNH 8.211495
COP 4695.430829
CRC 582.02551
CUC 1.143484
CUP 30.302324
CVE 110.518304
CZK 24.808686
DJF 203.219608
DKK 7.459998
DOP 67.695764
DZD 150.332354
EGP 56.761054
ERN 17.152259
ETB 153.33761
FJD 2.569694
FKP 0.842849
GBP 0.843102
GEL 3.121539
GGP 0.842849
GHS 11.720611
GIP 0.842849
GMD 80.617699
GNF 9896.853183
GTQ 8.788214
GYD 239.617042
HKD 8.972907
HNL 29.742099
HRK 7.534988
HTG 149.62688
HUF 403.374948
IDR 18606.484404
ILS 3.995679
IMP 0.842849
INR 98.075301
IQD 1497.963929
IRR 48140.672912
ISK 144.364991
JEP 0.842849
JMD 182.363596
JOD 0.810701
JPY 164.523895
KES 148.080909
KGS 99.997775
KHR 4599.09258
KMF 492.271421
KPW 1029.133033
KRW 1550.758564
KWD 0.350306
KYD 0.952983
KZT 583.401479
LAK 24676.382965
LBP 100740.933136
LKR 342.102703
LRD 228.016108
LSL 20.299784
LTL 3.376411
LVL 0.691682
LYD 6.226299
MAD 10.461739
MDL 19.744356
MGA 5122.808029
MKD 61.513424
MMK 2401.013763
MNT 4091.88438
MOP 9.24353
MRU 45.310609
MUR 52.154657
MVR 17.615425
MWK 1984.518141
MXN 21.892148
MYR 4.836787
MZN 73.125658
NAD 20.30005
NGN 1785.081679
NIO 42.091924
NOK 11.53227
NPR 156.878599
NZD 1.892809
OMR 0.439683
PAB 1.143579
PEN 4.145698
PGK 4.692
PHP 63.689199
PKR 322.63338
PLN 4.282552
PYG 9133.696277
QAR 4.16347
RON 5.04964
RSD 117.144183
RUB 89.621013
RWF 1623.74716
SAR 4.288532
SBD 9.537146
SCR 16.778946
SDG 686.090247
SEK 10.9629
SGD 1.470046
SHP 0.898599
SLE 25.899618
SLL 23978.286214
SOS 653.489453
SRD 42.242568
STD 23667.808369
SVC 10.006623
SYP 14867.889915
SZL 20.308665
THB 37.319317
TJS 11.310161
TMT 4.013629
TND 3.390437
TOP 2.678151
TRY 44.927071
TTD 7.739318
TWD 34.214167
TZS 3047.384435
UAH 47.386806
UGX 4150.351545
USD 1.143484
UYU 47.600532
UZS 14636.594511
VES 112.403468
VND 29810.625681
VUV 138.173916
WST 3.152695
XAF 656.63398
XAG 0.031728
XAU 0.00034
XCD 3.090322
XDR 0.819634
XOF 655.216626
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.150838
ZAR 20.301774
ZMK 10292.725543
ZMW 29.818743
ZWL 368.201354
  • CMSD

    -0.0311

    22.2

    -0.14%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.23

    0%

  • BCC

    -0.0300

    87.47

    -0.03%

  • NGG

    -0.0200

    71.03

    -0.03%

  • RBGPF

    0.4600

    67.96

    +0.68%

  • RIO

    0.7000

    59.24

    +1.18%

  • BCE

    -0.1150

    21.86

    -0.53%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    10.37

    -0%

  • BTI

    1.2650

    47.44

    +2.67%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    12.95

    -0.08%

  • GSK

    0.3500

    41.15

    +0.85%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2850

    11.865

    -2.4%

  • BP

    0.1300

    29.05

    +0.45%

  • RELX

    -0.5550

    53.8

    -1.03%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    10.21

    -0.49%

  • AZN

    -0.6500

    72.35

    -0.9%

End of the road in Colombia for Escobar's 'cocaine' hippos?
End of the road in Colombia for Escobar's 'cocaine' hippos?

End of the road in Colombia for Escobar's 'cocaine' hippos?

More than 100 African hippos descended from fewer than a handful imported as exotic pets by drug lord Pablo Escobar, face an uncertain future in Colombia.

Text size:

After the government added Escobar's so-called "cocaine" hippos Friday to a list of "introduced, invasive species," experts say killing them may be the only viable option.

From the few individuals once housed at Escobar's Hacienda Napoles estate, the hippos' numbers have ballooned, with 130 now roaming free north of Bogota around the Magdalena River.

Officials say the grazing giants, endemic to sub-Saharan Africa, threaten local wildlife and humans living along the river, whom they have already come into conflict with.

Attempts have been made to sterilize the animals, which can weigh as much as 1.8 tons, but doing so is expensive and difficult.

"Sacrifice (culling) remains on the table," said David Echeverri, head of the Cornare state environmental agency in charge of the sterilization effort.

"It is a necessary option... it could be the only way to stop the problem from getting worse," he told AFP.

Escobar, once head of the deadly Medellin Cartel, became one of the richest men on the planet, according to Forbes, thanks to the drug trafficking empire he built.

With his wealth he built a menagerie, acquiring hippos, flamingos, giraffes, zebras and kangaroos for his ranch.

After he was shot dead by police in 1993, all but the hippopotamuses were sold to zoos.

The semi-aquatic ungulates were left to roam Escobar's estate and continued breeding.

They are now believed to be the largest so-called "bloat" of hippopotamuses outside of Africa.

- 'Complex, expensive and dangerous' -

The creatures have long been a headache for authorities faced with a vocal anti-culling campaign.

Last Friday, the government officially declared the hippos an invasive species and announced it had a plan to "manage" their population, which studies have suggested could quadruple in 10 years.

Although the details of the plan have not been revealed, former environment minister Manuel Rodriguez has urged the government to use any means, including opening a hunt on the animals.

"Obviously there are animal activists opposed to this, but what is the alternative?" he said.

To date, Cornare has managed to surgically sterilize 11 hippos and dart another 40 with contraceptives.

The effort has cost more than $100,000, but has failed to stop hippo numbers from swelling.

"Everything with hippos is complex, expensive and dangerous," Echeverri told AFP.

- Potential 'tragedy' -

For Rodriguez, the animals pose a major threat to fishermen and other river-side inhabitants.

Last year, Cornare recorded two hippo attacks on people, neither fatal.

In Africa, hippos kill hundreds of people every year.

"We could face a tragedy," Rodriguez warned.

Also threatened by the hippos are the manatee -- large marine mammals that make the Magdalena River their home -- and a variety of native fish.

Earlier this year, activists with the backing of green parliamentary candidate Luis Domingo Gomez, proposed creating a sanctuary for the hippos with a mix of public and private funds.

But experts reject the proposal as costly and no less harmful to the local ecosystem.

"Are we going to maintain a sanctuary for hippos that attack the manatee?" asked Rodriguez.

Biologist Nataly Castelblanco, an expert on manatees, said local animals should take precedence.

"Native species have conservation priority over invasive species," she wrote on Twitter.

C.Zeman--TPP