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Cambodia deploys new batch of rat recruits as mine-detecting rat Magawa retires | Trending

Cambodia deploys new batch of rat recruits as mine-detecting rat Magawa retires | Trending
  • Published6월 13, 2021

Cambodia has deployed its next generation of rat recruits to sniff out landmines as part of efforts to boost de-mining operations in a country plagued for decades by unexploded ordinance (UXO).

Twenty African giant pouched rats were recently imported from Tanzania and have undergone intense training.

“They are all easy to work with and they don’t care about who their handlers are,” said handler So Malen, during an exercise on Friday for seven recruits in Preah Vihear province, bordering Thailand.

A mine detection rat sniffs for landmines in an area in Cambodia.(REUTERS)
A mine detection rat sniffs for landmines in an area in Cambodia.(REUTERS)

“Any one of us can be their handler and most importantly, they don’t bite.”

Scarred by decades of civil war, Cambodia is one of the world’s most heavily landmined countries, with more than 1,000 sq km (621 sq miles) of land still contaminated.

It has among the highest number of amputees per capita, with more than 40,000 people losing limbs to explosives.

The new rat batch replaces a recently retired group that includes Magawa, who found 71 landmines and 28 UXO during his five-year career, according to APOPO, an international organisation that specialises in detecting landmines and tuberculosis.

Magawa received a gold medal last year from Britain’s People’s Dispensary for Sick Animals for “lifesaving bravery and devotion to duty”.

Magawa, the recently retired mine detection rat, plays with his previous handler.(REUTERS)
Magawa, the recently retired mine detection rat, plays with his previous handler.(REUTERS)

Handler So Malen said the rats have an extraordinary sense of smell that guarantees results, and that all that separated them was their work rate.

“The small difference is that Magawa is a hero rat who worked faster than others,” So Malen said.

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This photo shows Cambodian landmine detection rat, Magawa, wearing his PDSA Gold Medal, the animal equivalent of the George Cross, in Siem, Cambodia.(AP)
This photo shows Cambodian landmine detection rat, Magawa, wearing his PDSA Gold Medal, the animal equivalent of the George Cross, in Siem, Cambodia.(AP)

AP | , Phnom Penh, Cambodia

PUBLISHED ON JUN 06, 2021 11:08 AM IST

The African giant pouched rat has been the most successful rodent trained and overseen by a Belgian nonprofit, APOPO, to find land mines and alert his human handlers so the explosives can be safely removed.

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