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Colombian court orders drug kingpin Pablo Escobar’s menacing hippos to be hunted

Activists and tourism workers oppose the move despite the two-tonne beasts affecting Cundinamarca’s ‘ecological balance’

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Hippos float in the lake at Colombia’s Hacienda Napoles Park, once the private estate of drug kingpin Pablo Escobar. Photo: AP

A Colombian court on Friday called for the hunting of hippos, introduced to the country in the 1980s by drug kingpin Pablo Escobar.

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The Administrative Court of Cundinamarca set a three-month deadline for the Ministry of Environment to issue “a regulation that contemplates measures for the eradication of the species,” which is affecting the area’s “ecological balance”.

In their homeland in Africa, the animals are responsible for more human deaths than almost any other animal, but in Colombia, the hippopotami have become loved members of the local community and a tourist attraction.

They’ve also been increasingly posing problems for the local community near Escobar’s old ranch in Antioquia state – one that experts worry may soon turn deadly.

After Escobar’s death, hippos from his private zoo made their way into nature, in an area of abundant vegetation and where there are no predators.

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There are now some 166 of the two-tonne beasts wandering freely.

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