The Star Malaysia

Retired police horses hoof off to France

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BRANTOME ( France): After years of pounding the pavement in Britain, four-legged veterans of the country’s fight against crime are hoofing it across the Channel to kick back under the sun in southwest France.

The rolling green hills of the Dordogne region are home to 22 retired police horses, who are getting their second wind in a sanctuary run by former Scotland Yard officer Roland Phillips.

For some of the retirees, the sanctuary situated a few kilometres from the town of Brantome is a place to recover from the riots that rocked England in 2011 after the shooting dead of a mixed-race man by London police.

In keeping with British policing tradition, the officers used horses rather than tear gas or water cannon to disperse the crowds.

“The last line of defence is the horse,” Phillips explained.

Some of his other charges saw action during the May 2016 unrest that erupted after a football game between London side West Ham and Manchester United at Upton Park stadium in the city’s east.

Her Majesty’s police force employs dozens of horses, some of whom have become celebritie­s on social media.

But no provision is made for those that are no longer up to the job, who risk being euthanised if no one offers them a home.

Phillips, a 60-year-old former police inspector, grew up at a sanc- tuary for retired and abused horses in southern England.

A year after joining thousands of British pensioners who have made their home in Dordogne, he and his wife Alison began taking in equine retirees in 2010.

His most recent acquisitio­n is Ranger, a nine-year-old with a chocolate brown coat and jet-black mane who was put out to pasture after the Upton Park riot.

Ranger is suffering from severe arthritis, which Phillips believes was brought on early by having firecracke­rs and other projectile­s lobbed at him.

On one occasion, a demonstrat­or sought to spook him by shining a laser beam into his eyes.

“Those horses have been through a very tough time indeed,” the greying former inspector said, lovingly stroking the horse’s nose.

Lewis, a sensitive 15-year-old with a broad white stripe bisecting his face, was badly traumatise­d by the violence of the urban riots of 2011.

“He was too soft by nature to be a police horse. He lacked confidence,” said Phillips.

On his arrival in France, Lewis shied away from humans, spending his days lying in the back of his stall.

Six years later he is one of the stars of the stables and enjoys the pats lavished on him by the hundreds of visitors who pass through each year.

“We made him sociable again,” said his proud owner.

While the police horses are the main attraction, Brantome sanctuary also takes in retired hunters and other off-casts. — AFP

 ??  ?? A home for horses: Phillips patting a horse in a stall at the ‘Brantome Police Horses’, a retirement home for horses of the British police, near Brantome. — AFP
A home for horses: Phillips patting a horse in a stall at the ‘Brantome Police Horses’, a retirement home for horses of the British police, near Brantome. — AFP

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