PHNOM PENH: Eleven endangered wild elephants in Cambodia were rescued on Saturday, four days after getting stuck in mud in an old bomb crater. The elephants were rescued in northeastern Mondulkiri province, home to about 250 wild elephants, said Wildlife Alliance official Botumroat Lebun. The chief of the provincial environment department, Keo Sopheak, who headed the rescue team, said the elephants were sent back to the jungle where they normally live. He said the animals apparently got stuck in the mud when they went to drink water at a three-meter-deep hole that was left over from US bombing during the Vietnam War. He said that if local villagers had not reported the incident, the elephants would have died from thirst and starvation.
Source: Bangkok Post March 25, 2017 11:37 UTC