Cheetahs fast running to extinction as cub trade thrives

A volunteer at the Cheetah Conservation Fund plays with cheetahs in their cage in one of the facilities of the organization in the city of Hargeisa, Somaliland. (File/AFP)
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Updated 13 November 2021
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Cheetahs fast running to extinction as cub trade thrives

  • Cheetahs have been prized as pets and hunting companions since the Roman Empire and breeding them in captivity is notoriously difficult, making wild-caught cubs the only option

HARGEISA, Somalia: Tiny, weeks-old cheetah cubs suckled from baby bottles and purred weakly, their condition still dangerously precarious after their rescue from the Horn of Africa’s illegal wildlife trade.

Around half the cubs saved from traffickers do not survive the trauma — and there are real concerns for the smallest of this lot, a frail infant nicknamed “Green” weighing just 700 grams.

“It was very touch and go with Green,” said Laurie Marker, founder of the Cheetah Conservation Fund, inspecting the mewling cub at the nonprofit organization’s rescue centre in Somaliland.

They are the lucky ones — every year an estimated 300 cheetah cubs are trafficked through Somaliland to wealthy buyers abroad seeking exotic pets.

Snatched from their mothers, shipped out of Africa to Yemen and onward to foreign countries, cubs that survive the ordeal can fetch up to $15,000 on the black market.

It is a busy trade, one less familiar than criminal markets for elephant ivory or rhino horn, but equally devastating for Africa’s most endangered big cat.

A century ago, there were an estimated 100,000 cheetahs worldwide. Today barely 7,000 remain, their numbers slashed by human encroachment and habitat destruction.

The steady plunder of cubs from the wild to satisfy the pet trade only compounds this decline.

More than 3,600 live cheetahs were illegally traded worldwide in the decade to December 2019, according to research published this year that documented hundreds of advertisements for cubs on social media platforms including YouTube and Instagram.

“If this keeps going ... that kind of offtake causes the population to go extinct in a very short time,” said Marker, a leading authority on cheetahs.

Cheetahs have been prized as pets and hunting companions since the Roman Empire and breeding them in captivity is notoriously difficult, making wild-caught cubs the only option.

Marker said wealthy owners liked to show off their cheetahs in selfies as much as their cars and cash.

“There’s kind of a one-upmanship on it, and there’s bragging power. One of our messages is do not ‘like’ this kind of thing on social media,” Marker said.

Combatting this criminal trade is particularly challenging because it revolves around Somaliland, a self-declared republic without international recognition, and one of the world’s poorest regions.

Roughly the size of Syria, with 850 km of coastline facing Yemen, the breakaway region between Ethiopia, Djibouti and Somalia is stretched thin policing its porous borders.

Somaliland’s Interior Minister Mohammed Kahin Ahmed said that a small coastguard unit was doing its best but apart from patrolling for cheetahs they had human traffickers and gun runners to contend with.

The cubs that slip through the net suffer terrible mistreatment along the smuggling route, fed improperly and confined to tiny cages, sometimes with their legs bound with zip ties.

Marker said one particular seizure in 2019 illustrated the cruelty: “When they dumped them out, there were live ones dying on top of dead ones ... It was just horrible,” she said.

In recent years, confiscations have soared as the government has cracked down on the trade.

From just a handful of cubs in 2018, today CCF shelters 67 rescued cheetahs across three safe houses in the Somaliland capital Hargeisa.

Laws criminalizing the sale of cheetahs have also started being enforced.

In October 2020, a smuggling ring was shattered and a high-profile trafficker prosecuted in a landmark trial.

Through a UK government-funded program, Somaliland is expanding intelligence sharing with neighboring countries and Yemen to fight the criminals robbing Africa of the iconic species.

But the government is also working with impoverished rural communities, whose conflict with cheetahs is another driver in the trade.

Of the 13 cubs confiscated between September and November, at least four were taken by farmers hoping to sell them and recoup losses after claiming their livestock were killed by cheetahs.

“The next generation may never see a cheetah if this illicit trade continues,” Edna Adan Ismail, Somaliland’s former foreign minister, told an anti-poaching conference in September.

Local veterinarian Ahmed Yusuuf Ibrahim is determined this grim prophecy does not pass.

The 27-year-old has been learning how to nurse sickly cubs back to health and has developed a close fondness for the cheetahs under his care.

They cannot fend for themselves, and eventually will be relocated to a larger natural enclosure outside Hargeisa.

But for now, Ibrahim is their doting custodian — right down to making sure cheetahs young and old get their fair share of camel meat.

“I care for them. I feed them, I clean them. They are my babies,” he said.


Palestinian woman hospitalized following seizure in US ICE detention

Updated 9 sec ago
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Palestinian woman hospitalized following seizure in US ICE detention

  • Kordia, a 33-year-old Muslim Palestinian woman living in the US and whose ‌mother is an ‌American citizen, was detained by US immigration ‌authorities ⁠early ​last year

WASHINGTON: A Palestinian woman, who lost dozens of family members in the Gaza war, has ​been hospitalized following a seizure in US immigration detention, the Department of Homeland Security said on Monday.
On February 6, 2026, at about 8:45 p.m., “medical staff at the Prairieland Detention Center in Alvarado, Texas, notified ICE that detainee Leqaa Kordia was admitted to Texas Health Huguley Hospital in Burleson, Texas, for further evaluation following a seizure,” a DHS spokesperson said.
Kordia, a 33-year-old Muslim Palestinian woman living in the US and whose ‌mother is an ‌American citizen, was detained by US immigration ‌authorities ⁠early ​last year.
She ‌was detained during a meeting with immigration officials at the Newark Immigration and Customs Enforcement Field Office, where she was accompanied by her attorney. At the time of her detention last year, Kordia was in the process of securing legal residency.
In a weekend statement cited by media, her family and legal team said they have not received communication from US authorities about her ⁠health. The family could not immediately be reached for comment. DHS says ICE will ensure ‌she receives proper medical care.
Rights groups have long ‍reported on detainee complaints about conditions ‍in ICE detention facilities, calling the conditions inhumane. The federal government ‍has denied treating detainees inhumanely.
Amnesty International says 175 members of Kordia’s family have been killed during Israel’s assault on Gaza since late 2023 following an attack by militant group Hamas.
The Homeland Security Department says Kordia, who was raised in the ​Israeli-occupied West Bank, was arrested for immigration violations related to overstaying her expired student visa. The DHS also says she was ⁠arrested by local authorities in 2024 during pro-Palestinian protests at Columbia University that the department cast as being supportive of Hamas.
Kordia and other protesters, including some Jewish groups, say the government wrongly equates criticism of Israel’s assault on Gaza and its occupation of Palestinian territories with antisemitism, and advocacy for Palestinian rights with support for extremism.
Kordia has said she was targeted for pro-Palestinian activism and cast the conditions in her detention facility as “filthy, overcrowded and inhumane.”
President Donald Trump’s administration cracked down on pro-Palestinian protests by threatening to freeze federal funds for universities where protests occurred and by attempting to deport ‌foreign protesters. It has faced legal obstacles while rights advocates say the crackdown hurts free speech and lacks due process.