African experts study escaped hippos in Colombia

BOGOTA (Reuters) – African zoologists are in  Colombia to advise local authorities on what to do with dozens  of hippos roaming around the abandoned zoo of late drug lord  Pablo Escobar in the north of the country.

Colombia was shocked last month at news that one of the  giant beasts, which had escaped from Escobar’s Hacienda Napoles,  had been hunted down and shot on order of the government.

Bogota-based beer company Bavaria, owned by SABMiller,  invited wildlife experts Michael Knight and Peter Morkel from  South Africa and Tanzania to find the best way to deal with the  surviving animals.     The slain hippopotamus, called Pepe, was killed by a .375  calibre round through the heart.

It was a fate not unlike that of Escobar, who controlled  most of the world’s cocaine supply before being gunned down by  police on a Medellin rooftop in 1993. He was so flush with cash  in the 1980s that he flew in hundreds of exotic animals,  including kangaroos, elephants, rhinos and nine hippos.

The experts will spend a week at Hacienda Napoles to come  up with a plan for caring for the hippos that are still living and multiplying on the estate.

The zoologists will also help look for Pepe’s mate,  Matilda, who escaped along with him in 2006, and their calf.

The mother and child are living in the wild near the  Magdalena River, according to local residents who catch sight  of them from time to time.

The government called off the hunt for Matilda following  the scandal caused by Pepe’s killing.