Two dogs being trained to join anti-poaching teams in Africa have visited a zoo in Yorkshire, England to get familiar with the animals they will help protect.
The dogs, Fudge and Rocket, spent time at Yorkshire Wildlife Park near Doncaster. Fudge is a 2-year-old cocker spaniel, and Rocket is a 15-month-old fox red labrador.
The visit, organized by the charity Dogs 4 Wildlife, allowed the dogs to get used to seeing and smelling animals like leopards, rhinos, giraffes, and zebras. This will help prepare them for their work in southern Africa.
Darren Priddle, the co-founder of Dogs 4 Wildlife, said it's vital for the dogs to become desensitized to the sights, sounds, and smells of the wildlife they will protect.
Once their training is complete, Rocket and Fudge will join a team of over 15 dogs working with rangers in Africa to help protect endangered species from poachers. Rocket will also work as a detection dog, searching for things like rhino horn at airports and borders.
The director of Yorkshire Wildlife Park, Neville Williams, said it was exciting to meet the dogs and learn about their important conservation work. He said every step forward in protecting wildlife is important.
Ecuadorian authorities have uncovered a major cocaine trafficking operation concealed within a banana shipment destined for Germany. During a routine inspection at the Deep Water Maritime Port in Posorja, sniffer dogs alerted police to the presence of narcotics in the export containers. A thorough search revealed 5,630 brick-shaped packages hidden beneath the bananas, amounting to a staggering 6.23 tons of cocaine.
The illicit shipment, valued at $224 million, was intercepted before reaching its intended destination in Germany. Five individuals were apprehended in connection with the case, including a representative of the exporting company who cooperated with officials by providing the identities of four other suspects. Authorities also detained the managers of the banana plantation where the cocaine was likely added to the cargo and the driver who transported the container to the port.
Ecuador has emerged as a major transit hub for cocaine trafficking, with criminal organizations exploiting the country's strategic location and ports to ship narcotics to Europe and the United States. Earlier this year, Ecuadorian security forces discovered a record-breaking 22-ton cocaine stash concealed on a pig farm, underscoring the ongoing battle against organized crime in the Andean nation.
In 2023, Ecuadorian authorities seized over 200 tons of drugs, predominantly cocaine, placing the country among the top three nations globally for drug interdiction efforts, behind only the United States and Colombia.
This incident marks yet another significant seizure of drugs concealed in banana shipments across the globe. In February, British authorities uncovered more than 12,500 pounds of cocaine hidden in a fruit consignment, setting a new record for the largest single seizure of hard drugs in the country.
Similarly, in August 2022, customs agents in the Netherlands seized 17,600 pounds of cocaine found hidden inside crates of bananas in Rotterdam's port[1]. Additionally, in October 2022, a police dog discovered 3 tons of cocaine stashed in a case of bananas at the Italian port of Gioia Tauro.