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A Snow Leopard Mission in Afghanistan

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To Save a Snow Leopard: A Special Afghanistan Mission

By *Tim McGirk / Kabul* <http://www.time.com/time/letters/email_letter.html>

* *Wednesday, Mar. 17, 2010

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ENLARGE

PHOTO+<http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2010/1003/snow_leopard_0315.jpg>

 

The snow leopard that was caught by a hunter in Afghanistan and rescued by

NATO troops

Richard W. Fite

 

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In a valley high in the Wakhan Mountains of Afghanistan, a hunter several

weeks ago waded through snowdrifts to check his traps and found that he had

snared one of the rarest creatures alive: a snow leopard.

 

If a naturalist had seen the leopard, he or she would have focused on its

snowy fur with black, half-moon markings and its white goatee. A naturalist

would have known that it is a solitary, elusive creature, a night hunter

that roams the icy Central Asian peaks far above human villages. A

naturalist would have known that there are perhaps less than a thousand of

them left on the planet. But the hunter who snared the snow leopard saw only

a $50,000 price tag. That was the fee supposedly offered by a wealthy

Pakistani businessman to any hunter in the Wakhan who could deliver a snow

leopard — alive. See a TIME photoessay on the rare and endangereed snow

leopard in

Afghanistan.<http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1972406,00.html>

 

The leopard was snarling and furious at being caught, with its hind leg

gashed by a wire snare. But otherwise, it was in good shape. With the help

of a few friends, the hunter tied the leopard's legs and muzzle, threw it in

the back of a truck, and headed out of the Wakhan Valley to Feyzabad, a

three-day journey of hairpin curves along terrifying mountain roads.

 

But the capture of a snow leopard, once believed to be extinct in

Afghanistan, didn't stay secret for long. The feline was to become the

object of a four-day rescue operation that involved NATO forces, the U.S.

ambassador in Kabul, a royal prince and even Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

But the mission would end like so many others of similarly good intentions

in Afghanistan. (See 10 species near

extinction.)<http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1888702,00.html>

 

First, the hunter and his friends were undone by their own greed. Upon

reaching Feyzabad, they thought they might get a better price for their cat

than $50,000 and began to shop around. " Somebody on the Internet was

supposedly offering $2 million for a live snow leopard, " says Mustapha

Zaher, director general of the National Environmental Protection Agency in

Kabul.

 

But the environmental protection agency office in Feyzabad was tipped off

about the cat. Zaher happens to be a prince, the grandson of the late Afghan

monarch Zaher Shah, and he has far more clout around Kabul than the ordinary

bureaucrat. " I raised a hullabaloo, " Zaher tells TIME with a grin. He paged

through his contacts book, calling U.S. Ambassador Karl Eikenberry, a

contingent of German troops stationed in Feyzabad (who at first were

skittish about leaving their base, even though that region of Afghanistan is

relatively calm). And he called the Afghan President. It had been a hard day

for Karzai; suicide bombers and gunmen had attacked an Indian guesthouse in

Kabul, killing dozens. But the President was sympathetic to the plight of

the leopard. " He told me, 'Do what you can to save him,' " says Zaher. (See

the top 10 animal stories of

2009.)<http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1945379_194423\

0,00.html>

 

The leopard was confiscated from the hunters, and Richard Fite, a New

Hampshire veterinarian who advises for the U.S. Agricultural Department in

northern Afghanistan, was dispatched to tend the snow leopard. Fite was more

accustomed to dealing with farm animals, and to encounter a snow leopard was

a marvel. " I never imagined in my life that I would be so close to such a

creature, " he says in a telephone interview. At first, the leopard was kept

in a cage at the police station, where it was poked by curious onlookers.

 

When Fite examined the leopard, it had been moved to the atrium of a nearby

guesthouse, and its cage was littered with chunks of uneaten raw meat. The

leopard growled at Fite but remained subdued, he says. When he looked into

the eyes of the animal, says Fite, he could tell it was ailing. " All I could

think of was the tragedy of it all, " he says, adding, " The mental stress on

the animal from capture, transport, being bound and being held for almost a

week would have been unimaginable. "

 

Over the next three days, Fite tended to the leopard. Then, after advice

from experts at the World Conservation Society in Kabul, a decision was made

to fly the leopard back to the Wakhan and free it into the wild, once it had

regained strength. " We didn't want it dumped unconscious on a snowfield

where it would freeze to death, " says Dave Lawson, the Society's country

director. Bad weather kept the U.S. helicopter grounded. After what seemed

like a day of improved health — the leopard was holding its head up and

grooming itself — and a break in the storm clouds that would allow the

chopper to take off, Fite was optimistic. But the next morning, on March 2,

he was informed that the snow leopard had died. " My guess — and it is just

that — is that it died from shock " he says, adding, " Snow leopards are

solitary, reclusive animals. "

 

An Afghan elder who had seen the leopard in the cage wept when he saw its

dead body carried out. " A lot of these mountain people have respect for

wildlife, " says Lawson, who was told by an elder that " God put these animals

here for us to look after. " The death of a snow leopard may not be of great

consequence in Afghanistan's larger turmoil. But for many Afghans, the snow

leopard is a symbol of the country's spirit of untamed wildness. For a few

brief moments, everyone from the President to the top U.S. diplomat in the

country turned their gaze away from politics and terrorism to a shivering,

sick cat in a cage. And when it died, everyone from the highest echelons of

power to humble villagers suffered a profound loss.

 

— *With reporting by Shah Mahmood Barakzai / Kabul*

 

 

Read more:

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1972402,00.html#ixzz0iW2Jf0ZY

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1972402,00.html

 

 

 

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