Cocaine king’s hippo gunned down in Colombia

BOGOTA, (Reuters) – Drug lord Pablo Escobar’s hippo  died the same way he did, hunted down and shot by the  authorities for posing a danger to the public.

The hippopotamus that escaped three years ago from a ranch  once owned by Escobar was killed on orders of the government,  Colombian media reported yesterday.

Cocaine king Escobar, who was gunned down by police on a  Medellin rooftop in 1993, was so flush with cash that he flew  in hundreds of exotic animals, including kangaroos, flamingos,  elephants, rhinos and nine hippos.

Many were given away to zoos after his death and collapse  of his drug empire. But two dozen hippos continued to live and  mate on his former estate in northern Colombia.

A male and a female escaped in 2006, freely roamed the  wetlands near the Magdalena River and even reproduced in the  wild.

They were rarely seen and became something of a local  legend until two journalists found them grazing 100 kilometers  (65 miles) away from the ranch last month.