Friday, 29 January 2016

Israeli vulture detained in Lebanon on suspicion of being a spy

(CNN)Imagine Jason Bourne -- but with feathers, claws and two-meter wingspan.

 A griffon vulture, like the one held in Lebanon. In a similar incident in 2011, officials in Saudi Arabia 'detained' a vulture on suspicion of being an Israeli spy, according to<a href="http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/141529#.VqjQZ_mLRhE" target="_blank"> Israel's Maariv-NRG news site.</a> It was also carrying a GPS transmitter causing locals to suspect the worst.
A vulture that flew into Lebanon from an Israeli nature reserve has been captured on suspicion of spying, according to local media reports.
Gamla Nature Reserve tracked the bird to near the southern Lebanese village of Bint Jbeil, which is just a few kilometers over the border from Israel -- then reports began trickling in that the bird was being held by locals who suspected it because it had Israeli tags and devices.
A series of pictures also surfaced: one of a vulture with Israeli tags and a rope tied around its leg; another of a transmitter on the same bird's back; and another of two men displaying the bird's massive wingspan.
Pictures of the vulture show what appears to be a transmitter on its back.
The huge griffin vulture -- which is part of a conservation project to restore the raptors in the Middle East -- has a metal ring on its leg indicating it is from Tel Aviv University, tags on its wings, and a GPS transmitter attached to its tail.
"[Locals in Lebanon] caught the bird for sure," says Ohad Hatzofe, bird ecologist at the reserve in the Golan Heights, which Israel occupied from Syria in 1967. "They were holding the bird in their hands."
The vulture was released in the same place it was caught after it was "certain that it was not carrying any hostile [spying] equipment," according CNN. Since then, the Israeli parks authority has not been able to track where the vulture went and is worried about its health.
Hatzofe dismissed the idea of a vulture spy as "senseless" but added: "I can understand the suspicions with the history we have in this region."

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