The Province

Israel’s stray crocs a menace

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In the mid-1990s, amid a boom of optimism that the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict would soon be solved, a group of crocodiles was brought to the remote settlement of Petzael in the West Bank as a tourist attraction.

Peace has not yet come to pass, nor has the promise of visitors flocking to Petzael.

However, they’re still there, they’re breeding — and no one knows what to do with them.

There have been attempts to figure out a solution for the crocs, which now number in the hundreds.

Israeli entreprene­ur Gadi Biton purchased the farm years ago, thinking he could sell the animals for their skin, according to The Associated Press. But the venture collapsed in 2012, when the Israeli government made the crocodile a protected animal, banning their sale for meat or clothing.

Biton then thought he could get Cyprus — no stranger to territoria­l disputes — to snap up the scaly beasts. But efforts to relocate them to the Mediterran­ean island have stalled as residents and officials raise

concerns about public safety and the continuous breeding of the animals, according to the Cyprus Mail.

Israeli officials in the Jordan Valley, the area of the West Bank where Petzael is located, worry that the animals pose a danger to residents in the area. A full-grown crocodile can be as long as 6 metres and weigh up to 2,200 pounds. They live as long as 75 years, and the strength of their bite has been compared to that of a Tyrannosau­rus rex.

While officials work on solution, Sky News reports that care for the animals has fallen on “a lone worker” tasked with feeding them a diet of dead chickens each day.

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