Pablo Escobar's rampaging cocaine hippos facing Colombian government cull
Pablo Escobar's notorious "cocaine hippos" are facing a cull by the Colombian government after their numbers spiralled out of control.
The herd, which has grown to nearly 170 from just four that escaped from Escobar's private zoo in Puerto Triunfo 30 years ago, bred rapidly and proved difficult to catch. Now Colombia's Environment Minister Susana Muhamad has announced the start of a cull on some of the creatures.
A statement released on November 2 said at least 20 animals will be destroyed this year, according to local media. Minister Muhamad said the culling will run alongside a sterilisation programme and plans to send the hippos to new homes in other countries like India or the Philippines.
She said: "The first stage of this management plan begins, which next week will show the sterilisation phase of hippos in Colombia. Sterilisation is not the only strategy, nor will it be enough. We cannot control populations with sterilisations alone. The procedure is complex and expensive, between six and seven hours for each individual.
"It has a follow-up stage for each individual. It has risks for doctors and the animal. In any case, there is expertise in the country." She added: "The three strategies have to work at the same time.
Furious chimp launches bottle at girl filming him leaving her bleeding at zoo"Here we are in a race against time in terms of permanent environmental and ecosystem impacts that are being generated and that is why it could not be said that a single strategy is effective for our objective, which is to control the population.
"We seek to implement this plan in the shortest time possible, precisely so that the impacts cease." Scientists believe the hippos pose a threat to the area's natural wildlife since their urine and faeces are toxic and carry a range of dangerous bacteria.
Currently, there are a record number of 166 hippos according to calculations by the Ministry of Environment. But the total is expected to rise to 1,000 by 2035 if their breeding goes unchecked.
Before he was shot fleeing police, Pablo Escobar was the leader of the powerful Medellin drugs cartel. His gang was believed to be behind up to 80 per cent of all the cocaine shipped to the US.
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