Baltimore Sun Sunday

Stranded reptiles a crocodile conundrum

- By Isaac Scharf and Alon Bernstein

PETZAEL, West Bank — An Israeli businessma­n appears to have bitten off more than he can chew with plans for a crocodile farm in a West Bank settlement.

Hundreds of crocodiles have been stranded at the farm in a remote spot in the Jordan Valley — left behind by a pair of failed business ventures.

The crocodiles were brought to the settlement of Petzael in the mid-1990s as a tourist attraction. Ensuing Israeli-Palestinia­n violence kept visitors away, prompting the crocodiles’ purchase by entreprene­ur Gadi Biton, who hoped to sell them for their skin.

But his venture flopped after Israel passed a law in 2012 defining the crocodile as a protected animal, and banning raising the animals for sale as meat or merchandis­e.

Multiple attempts to sell them abroad have failed.

“We found ourselves with hundreds of crocodiles in this farm that no one knows what to do with,” said David Elhayani, head of the Jordan Valley Regional Council.

A lone worker feeds the animals dead chickens every eight days.

Dozens of the crocodiles lazed recently on the sunbaked shores of a lagoon on the property, their jaws ajar, revealing menacing teeth.

The animals have become a pain for the owner, the region and Israel.

Dozens of crocs have escaped on two occasions, including one when 70 flew the coop only to be found after a three-day hunt.

The reptiles, which can live well into their 70s, are also reproducin­g. Their numbers are expected to grow to the thousands in the coming years.

“I don’t want to think of what will happen if a crocodile manages to escape and reaches the Jordan River, and then we’ll have an internatio­nal incident,” Elhayani said.

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