World

Six Trapped Baby Elephants Rescued by Rangers in Thailand

HAPPY ENDING

The rescue operation took five hours to complete.

baby_elephants_xdxjr8
Phil Noble/Reuters

Rangers at a national park in northeastern Thailand have rescued six baby elephants that were trapped in a mud pit. The rescue operation took five hours to complete, as the rangers had to dig a path to help the elephants clamber out of the pit. Park officials said the elephants were unable to climb up the pit’s slippery banks. The head of the park, Prawatsart Chantep, said rangers found the trapped animals while patrolling the park’s forest areas on Wednesday afternoon. At nightfall, one group of rangers left to get help while another group remained with the elephants. Prawatsart said there were signs that a herd of elephants believed to be related to the trapped infants were circling the area. It was unclear how the babies became trapped. A video taken by rangers shows the baby elephants climbing out of the muddy ditch one by one.

Read it at AP News

Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast here.