We’ve just done something rather rash. We acted instinctively, with our hearts not our heads. Let me tell you what we’ve done. I know you’ll understand …
Last week I got a heart-wrenching phone call from Ethiopia. It was Stephen Brend, our project director there. “If we don’t rescue this lion cub, they’re going to shoot him.”
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Here’s the background story from Stephen:
“Last December, in Kebri Dehar in the badlands of eastern Ethiopia, where the country borders Somalia, a lioness killed a camel. The angry villagers poisoned the lioness in retaliation. That left two orphaned lion cubs, alone in the bush. The local Ethiopian army detachment went on a search. They only found one, a tiny male. His sibling undoubtedly had died, most likely killed by hyenas.
“The army took the cub back to their barracks and did an amazing job of hand-rearing him. But that was five months ago. ‘Kebri’ is now the size of a Rottweiler and has the teeth to match. The army could no longer cope and said if he is not moved in the next few days, they would be forced to shoot him.”
Well, you can guess what happened next. We had to find a way to save Kebri. This would be one of our biggest challenges yet. A lion rescue is normally planned months in advance. Which gives us time to raise funds and get everything organized. But this one had to be done in just a handful of days, in a remote, unfamiliar and unpredictable part of Ethiopia, well off the beaten track. There was nothing easy about this rescue! And the Foreign Office advises against all travel to the area …
But we were the cub’s only chance of survival. We couldn’t let him down. Stephen’s right-hand man, Bereket Girma, built a special crate to transport the young lion. Our consultant vet, Dr. Rea Tschopp, canceled all other work, while the Ethiopian Wildlife Conservation Authority assigned one of its vets to accompany us.
Kebri Dehar is 625 miles from our rescue center. Far too far to drive. And far too difficult. So we …
… chartered a small plane to get us in and out. This would minimize risk, even though the area only has a dirt landing strip. Gulp.
So, taking our courage in our hands we went and got the lion cub. Kebri’s rescue on Thursday, May 31 was complicated, fraught and harrowing. We had to remove seats from the little plane to fit the crate in. Stephen and his team had an exhausting and almost impossibly demanding journey.
But we’ve got him. Kebri is home safe! We’ve brought him to our rescue center, near Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa.
I say home. But we’ve got nowhere to put the cub. For the time being we’ve put this exuberant young lion into a small temporary pen. But this is just a short-term solution. We need to create a spacious bush enclosure full of acacia trees, dense undergrowth in which to hide and sandy soil to roll in. Big cats love a good view of their surroundings and Kebri would be able to look down over rolling hills and forests.
What a contrast to his restricted world of concrete and bricks at the army barracks!
I hope you can forgive our impetuous act. Yes, we’ve behaved impulsively. But with an individual animal’s life at stake there was no choice for us. To dive in and do something is the Born Free way. You know us well enough to understand!
Blogging off,
Will