The Mercury News

Campaign to save Benito the giraffe sends him to Mexico

- By Mark Stevenson

A campaign to save Benito the giraffe from extreme temperatur­es and a small enclosure in Mexico's arid northern border city of Ciudad Juarez has finally paid off, with officials promising to move him to a more spacious animal park 1,250 miles (2,000 kilometers) to the south.

Benito arrived in Ciudad Juarez, which is across the border from El Paso, Texas, in May 2023 as a 3-year-old, and since then has had to put up with the scorching desert sun with just a small patch of shade, as well as the winter cold and winds.

“Right now he's suffering from the winter weather,” said Ana Félix, a Ciudad Juarez animal rights activist whose group “We Are Your Voice” led the fight to find a better home for Benito. “These winds of 25 miles per hour (40 kph) are what are really affecting the health and life of the giraffe now.”

It can't come a minute too soon for Benito. Temperatur­es in Ciudad Juarez were forecast to drop to 25 degrees (-4 Celsius) on Monday, for example.

The government of the northern state of Chihuahua on Monday confirmed it had reached an agreement to transfer Benito to the Africam Safari park in the central state of Puebla because “the well-being of Benito is the priority.”

Africam operates a safari-style park in which animals roam large enclosures, while visitors observe many of the species from their cars.

Félix said the decision was long overdue and came only after activists had mounted social media campaigns showing Benito crouching with only his head under a small, circular canopy for shade last summer.

The Attorney General's Office for Environmen­tal Protection, known by its Spanish initials as Profepa, wrote that it had taken administra­tive possession of the giraffe and that he would remain where he was until several days of paperwork were completed for the transfer.

“Fortunatel­y Africam Safari has agreed to take him, and now it's only a matter of Profepa hurrying up and issuing the paperwork needed to transfer this giraffe,” Félix said.

Africam Safari Director Frank Carlos Camacho said in a video that his reserve “is ready to receive him,” but noted that moving an animal the size of a giraffe across the country “is a complicate­d thing.”

At Ciudad Juarez's cityrun Central Park, Benito had a small shed for winter, but activists said it was cruel to keep the giraffe in a small fenced enclosure, by himself, with only about a half acre to wander and few trees to nibble, in a climate he's not used to.

 ?? CHRISTIAN CHAVEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Benito the giraffe looks out from his enclosure at the city run Central Park, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, in June 2023.
CHRISTIAN CHAVEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Benito the giraffe looks out from his enclosure at the city run Central Park, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, in June 2023.

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