The Manila Times

Thai PM meets albino buffalo sold for $500,000

-

BANGKOK: Thailand’s Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin took the bull by the horns on Wednesday as he welcomed an unusual visitor to his offices: an enormous white buffalo that recently sold for $500,000.

The bulky bovine, named Ko Muang Phet, was renowned in Thai farming circles as a stud animal but hit the mainstream last week with its big-ticket sale, and earned a trip to Government House to meet Srettha.

Standing 1.8 meters (6 feet) tall, the four-year-old albino from western Phetchabur­i province weighs 1.4 tons — almost three times more than the average buffalo.

Ko Muang Phet has already become a minor television star, featuring in an episode of the hugely popular “Sound from the Field of Love” soap opera.

Srettha — no shorty himself at 1.92 m tall — went nose-to-nose with the horned celebrity in front of Government House.

“I had no idea we had such [a] beautiful buffalo,” Srettha told the reporters gathered, gingerly patting one of the creature’s huge, curved horns. “Are there more like this?”

Water buffaloes are ubiquitous in the Thai countrysid­e, prized as sturdy and reliable farm animals, and albino specimens are particular­ly valuable because of their rarity.

And big bulls are big business: a farmer in northern Phitsanulo­k province reportedly sold his 1.4-ton bull for more than $1.45 million last year.

In a post on X, formerly Twitter, Srettha said the Thai Buffalo Breeding Associatio­n had asked the government to promote the animals as a tool of “soft power.”

Ko Muang Phet’s delighted owner, Jintanat Limtongkul, was all for the idea.

“I want people to get to know [the] buffalo more. Thai people used to be close to agricultur­e and buffalo, but our lifestyle nowadays has distanced us,” he told reporters at Government House.

He pledged to bring four giant buffalo to meet tourists at Bangkok’s backpacker hotspot of Khao San Road next month for Songkran, the Thai new year festival which sees thousands of revelers soak one another in the streets in a mass water fight.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines