Several hippopotamuses have been massacred in a Niger city after they became incensed with certain things the animals had done.
File photo: A dead hippopotamus
No less than 27 hippopotamuses have been massacred in Niger Republic.
Local authorities, on Thursday, revealed the animals were slaughtered in a touristy zone in western Niger by angry villagers who blame them for destroying crops and harming livestock.
According to Agence France Presse, AFP, the prefect of the Ayorou region, Jando Rhichi Algaher, revealed that the “massacre …started in March and then assumed dramatic proportions” mainly in island settlements on the Niger river.
Large numbers of hippos and several bird species have made Ayorou, about 200 kilometres (125 miles) from the capital Niamey, a popular place for tourists.
Patrols by troops “have helped slow the slaughter”, Algaher said.
“The locals have killed a large number of hippopotamuses, although this species is protected,” Environment Minister Almoustapha Garba said on state radio.
“We urged the local people not to break the law and took note of their concerns,” said Garba, who promised to pay compensation to the affected farmers.
Tension is high in Ayorou after the arrest of about ten people suspected of killing a hippopotamus. Some of the suspects have been freed, Algaher said.
In May, local tribal chiefs issued warnings about hippos, saying they were ravaging crops and threatening boats on the Niger river.
In 2014, 12 schoolchildren aged between 12 and 13 were killed when a hippo attacked their boat on the Niger at Libore, a village near Niamey.