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China’s wandering elephants may finally be heading home

Aerial view of elephants crossing river on a highway
A herd of wandering elephants crosses a river using a highway near Yuxi city in southwestern China’s Yunnan province Sunday.
(Yunnan Provincial Command Center for the Safety and Monitoring of North Migrating Asian Elephants)
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An elephant herd that fascinated local residents and people around the world by making a yearlong journey into urbanized southwest China, raiding farms and even a retirement home for food, appears finally to be headed home.

Local authorities have deployed trucks, workers and drones to monitor the elephants, evacuated roads for them to pass safely and used food to steer them away from populated areas. Despite their entrance into villages and a close approach to the Yunnan provincial capital of Kunming, no animals or humans have been injured.

The 14 Asian elephants of various sizes and ages were guided across the Yuanjiang river in Yunnan on Sunday night, and a path is being opened for them to return to the nature reserve where they lived in the Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture.

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The elephants left the reserve more than a year ago for unknown reasons and roamed more than 300 miles north. After reaching the outskirts of Kunming, a center for business and tourism, they turned south again, but still are far from the reserve.

Both animals are coughing but are showing signs of improvement.

One male that separated from the herd was subsequently tranquilized and returned to the reserve.

Asian elephants are among the most highly protected animals in China, and their population has grown to around 300, even while their habitat has shrunk because of expanded farming and urban growth.

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As of Sunday night, the herd was still in Yuanjiang County, approximately 125 miles from the reserve.

However, the National Forestry and Grassland Administration said the animals were in a “suitable habitat” after crossing the river.

A notice issued by the provincial government said that the herd’s progress was significant and that officials would continue to work on getting the elephants back in their natural habitat soon.

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