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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • 20
    Mar
    2013
    1:12pm, EDT

    'Stay calm': Woman walks away after Canada wolf attack

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A woman in Manitoba, Canada, was receiving rabies treatment Wednesday after surviving a roadside attack by a timber wolf.

    Dawn Hepp was driving along a highway near Grand Rapids, Manitoba, on March 8 when she pulled over to see if a stopped motorist was in need of help, Canadian national broadcaster CBC reported.

    As she walked to the other motorist's car, the wolf leapt at her.

    "His face and his jaws were around my neck," she told CBC, adding that she could feel the wolf's fur on her face.

    "He dug a little deeper with that tooth and by the larynx," she added. "Whether he couldn't get a good enough grip or what, he let go."

    Hepp told the broadcaster that she remembered something her father taught her to do if an animal on their farm ever turned on her.

    "I could just hear my dad saying, 'Stay calm, Dawn. Stay calm, Dawn.' So what I did was I just stayed calm, I didn't yell, I didn't scream," she said.

    Her husband, Kim Hepp, said Wednesday his wife was still in the town of Ashern, where she drove to get medical attention after the attack and where she continues to get rabies injections.

    "She's got to stay until she's done with the needles," he said.

    Hepp said hearing that his wife had been attacked by a wolf was "pretty scary."

    "The [Royal Canadian Mounted Police] were in my yard and told me she was attacked by a wolf and was in a hospital," he said. "I asked straight away if she was OK."

    Once free, Hepp walked to her car, wolf in tow, apologized to the other motorist -- who wasn't having car trouble after all -- for having to go, then drove herself three hours to get help, Canada's National Post reported. 

    Hepp said the wolf, standing on its hind paws, was taller than her, and she estimated its weight at 200 pounds, according to the paper.

    Her husband said he was surprised that the incident had occurred at all.

    "There are a lot of wolves in and around town," he said, "but you don't hear about people being attacked by them."

    Hank Hristienko, a big-game biologist with government agency Manitoba Conservation, said: "It's extremely rare. As far as we can tell, this is the first ever here in Manitoba."

    Disease, starvation, an injury or the desire to protect a nearby kill could have caused the wolf to attack, he said.

    Hristienko said he doubted that the attack was driven by a desire to eat. "If it were a predatory attack, she would probably not be surviving," he said.

    Hristienko said there are probably at least 4,000 wolves in the province, which at about 250,000 square miles is a little smaller than Texas.

    Related:

    Murderer's corpse dragged from car, eaten by bear in Canada

    161 comments

    I'm glad to hear she is ok, too. But, what about the other motorist? They didn't help out? Didn't offer to drive her to the hospital? Did that person know there was a wolf there? This lady is BRAVE!!! I don't know if I could have done what she did. Way to tell the wolf who is boss!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, world, animals, wildlife, featured, manitoba, wolf-attack, hepp
  • 16
    Jan
    2013
    2:30am, EST

    'A big catch': Record two tons of ivory seized in Kenya

    Police in Kenya have seized more than two tons of ivory worth $1.15 million. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By James Macharia, Reuters
    MOMBASA, Kenya — Police in Kenya have seized more than two tons of ivory worth 100 million shillings ($1.15 million), the biggest haul on record in the east African country, officials said on Tuesday.

    "This is a big catch, the biggest ever single seizure of ivory at the port of Mombasa," said Kiberenge Seroney, the port's police officer in charge of criminal investigations. "We fail to understand where one gathers the courage to park such enormous quantities of ivory, hoping that they can slip through our security systems."

    Poaching is a growing problem for sub-Saharan African countries reliant on rich wildlife in their game reserves to draw foreign tourists.

    Heavily-armed criminals kill elephants and rhinos for their tusks, which are used for ornaments and in some folk medicines. Most of the elephant tusks smuggled from Africa ends up in Asian countries, according to police.

    On Jan. 5, poachers killed a family of 11 elephants in the biggest single mass shooting of the animals on record in Kenya, wildlife officials said.

    Gitau Gitau, an assistant commissioner with the Kenya Revenue Authority, said paperwork accompanying a container at the port of Mombasa declared it contained decorative stones.

    The carcasses of a family of elephants have been found in a wildlife reserve in Kenya - the victims of the worst massacre on record by ivory poachers there. NBC News' Rohit Kachroo reports.

    "But when we opened it we found elephant tusks," said Gitau as he displayed the ivory. "The ivory was originating from Rwanda and Tanzania and was to be exported to Indonesia."

    Related stories:

    Family of 12 elephants slain by poachers in Kenya

    Indian park battles poachers targeting rhino horn

    Rhino slaughter in South Africa sets savage pace

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    55 comments

    Anyone involved in Rhino and Elephant killings for tusks and horns, should face the death penalty! The biggest demand is coming from Asia! Why isn't there a world wide outcry to stop this behavior. Rhino horn has no aphrodisiac properties, only that its phallic in form! What Idiotic cultural beliefs …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: indonesia, animals, police, smuggling, africa, tanzania, environment, kenya, rwanda, elephants, conservation, poaching, featured, ivory
  • 6
    Jan
    2013
    9:16pm, EST

    Cat caught smuggling contraband into Brazil prison

    Penitentiary System Of Alagoas / AFP - Getty Images

    Brazilian authorities captured a cat that was entering a prison with a saw, bits for hand drills, a mobile phone, batteries and charger. The cat belonged to the prisoners and was frequently taken by relatives to their homes, returning to the prison on its own.

    By Isolde Raftery, NBC News

    The cat came back, it just couldn’t stay away.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    And when it did come back on New Year’s Eve, a guard standing watch at a prison gate in northeastern Brazil thought there was something unusual about the slender white kitty slipping by.  

    He alerted other guards who helped him to catch the feline, according to a statement by the federal prisons bureau, and they found that the cat’s torso was wrapped tight with contraband.


    Specifically: Two small saws, two drills for concrete, a headset, a cell phone, a cell phone charger and three batteries.

    PhotoBlog: Cat caught carrying contraband

    The confiscated material could have allowed inmates to cut bars and dig tunnels, according to the statement, while allowing them to communicate with people on the outside. The cat, it appeared, belonged to the inmates and traveled between the prison and the homes of the inmates' families, who live in the area.

    All 263 inmates at the Arapiraca prison are deemed suspects because, a prison spokeswoman told the Estado de Sao Paulo: “It will be hard to figure out who is responsible, as the cat does not talk.”

    The spokeswoman said it was the first time a cat tried to smuggle in contraband since the prison was built in 2002.

    The newspaper said the cat was not held at the prison and was instead transferred to the city’s animal shelter for veterinary care. 

    A cat slipped into a prison in Brazil but was intercepted by prison officials, who found a drill and saw taped to its body. TODAY's Jenna Wolfe reports.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • US drone strikes kill at least 18 Pakistani militants, sources tell NBC
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    • Chavez ally re-elected, cementing position as possible caretaker president
    • 'Nobody helped us for an hour,' Indian rape witness says
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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    94 comments

    Charge the cat with a feliney.

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  • 30
    Oct
    2012
    8:14am, EDT

    Home sweet home: Pandas return four years after China quake

    China Daily via Reuters

    A giant panda is seen on a tree at the new base of the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda in Wolong, Sichuan province, on October 30, 2012.

    Pandas displaced after an earthquake struck their reserve in 2008 have begun to return home.

    The first batch of 18 pandas moved into the new base of the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda on Tuesday, according to local media reports cited by Reuters. They had been relocated following the 2008 Sichuan earthquake which devastated the famed Wolong reserve, one of the earliest research bases set up by the Chinese government in the early 1980s. 

    Behind the Wall: Counting China's wild pandas

    June 17, 2008: The epicenter of China's massive earthquake was 15 miles from one of the last habitats for the giant panda, China's beloved national symbol. NBC's Mark Mullen offers a status report on the survivors.

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    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

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    Explore related topics: china, asia, animals, panda, world-news, wolong
  • 1
    Sep
    2012
    6:37pm, EDT

    Anupam Nath / AP

    Offerings made to elephant killed by train in India

    A villager offers flowers to a female adult elephant lying dead in a paddy field in Panbari village, India, Saturday, Sept. 1. The elephant was hit by a train and killed while crossing railway tracks with a herd of wild Asiatic elephants.

    See a PhotoBlog post about another elephant killed by a train in India in August.

    See more PhotoBlog posts about elephants.

    9 comments

    The reverence shown here is something missing in so many places in the world today. The photo is beautiful and respectful at the same time. Congratulations to the photographer!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: india, animals, train, elephant, animal-tracks
  • 22
    Aug
    2012
    10:34am, EDT

    From the smallest to the tallest, zoo animals weigh in

    Andrew Cowie / AFP - Getty Images

    A zookeeper strokes a penguin on a scale during the annual weigh-in at London Zoo on Aug. 22.

    Facundo Arrizabalaga / EPA

    A meerkat climbs a scale on which another animal is already been weighed during the zoo's annual weigh-in at ZSL London Zoo, Aug. 22.

    Andrew Cowie / AFP - Getty Images

    A zookeeper measures Dirk the giant tortoise during the annual weigh-in at London Zoo on Aug. 22.

    Oli Scarff / Getty Images

    Giraffes are weighed and measured during the ZSL London Zoo 's annual weigh-in on Aug. 22.

    Oli Scarff / Getty Images

    Zookeeper Don McFarlane weighs and measures an African Millipede during the zoo's annual weigh-in on Aug. 22.

    ZSL’s Zoological Director, David Field says: “We need to know the vital statistics of every animal at the Zoo – however big or small."

    Zookeepers at the London Zoo are responsible for more than 16,000 animals, spending countless hours recording the weight and measurements of each and every animal, including penguins, meerkats, lions and owls.  The measurements are collated in the Zoological Information Management System, from which zoologists can use the data to compare information on thousands of endangered species.

    “This information helps us to monitor their health, their diets and their general well-being. By sharing it with other zoos and conservationists, we can use this knowledge to protect wild animals, and use it to assess their health, their behaviours and even their ages,” said Field.

    Facundo Arrizabalaga / EPA

    Giraffes await to go out at the London Zoo, Aug. 22.

    See more cute animals our our Animal Tracks slideshow

    27 comments

    Don't know about you but those millipedes gave me some wicked heebee geebees!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: animals, zoo, world-news, featured, london-zoo, animal-tracks
  • 22
    Aug
    2012
    10:08am, EDT

    Bao Bao, one of world’s oldest pandas, dies at Berlin zoo

    AFP/Getty Images file

    Panda bear Bao Bao plays in his indoor enclosure at the Berlin Zoo in 2007.

    By Andy Eckhardt, NBC News

    MAINZ, Germany -- Bao Bao, one of the world’s oldest giant pandas, died at the age of 34 early Wednesday, officials at Berlin’s zoo told NBC News.

    The animal's health had been deteriorating over the past months, zoo officials said. Bao Bao had not been eating well and had shown a gaunt face, zoo officials say. The cause of death is being determined in an autopsy.


    In 1980, Bao Bao was given as a gift by China to Helmut Schmidt, who was the West German chancellor at the time. Bao Bao was the only remaining Panda at the Berlin zoo after the death of Yan Yan in 2007.

    A 20-year-old panda gives birth to her sixth cub and the little one's arrival is captured on the San Diego Zoo's "Panda Cam." TODAY.com's Dara Brown reports.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

    5 comments

    Had Dubya focused on Afghanistan completely, instead of waging a war on Iraq in 2003 to settle a vendetta stemming from a plot during the Clinton administration years that was uncovered by US intelligence that Iraq had a red-dot on George H.W. Bush's life, we'd probably have been already done in tha …

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    Explore related topics: animals, zoo, science, panda, wildlife, berlin, andy-eckhardt
  • 6
    Jul
    2012
    7:17pm, EDT

    Spanish villagers partake in Shearing of the Beasts

    Dennis Doyle / Getty Images

    A horse rears its head as it's rounded up on the eve of the Rapa Das Bestas or "Shearing of the Beasts" festival on July 6, 2012 in Sabucedo, Spain.

    During the first weekend of July hundreds of wild horses are rounded up, trimmed and groomed in different villages in the northwestern Spanish region of Galicia as part of a 400-year-old festival call Rapa das Bestas or “Shearing of the Beasts.”

    Miguel Riopa / AFP - Getty Images

    A villager rounds up wild horses on the hills of Sabucedo, Spain during the Rapa das Bestas on July 6, 2012.

    Miguel Vidal / Reuters

    Participants grab a wild horse during Rapa das Bestas in Sabucedo, Spain on July 6, 2012.

    Miguel Vidal / Reuters

    A participant of Rapa das Bestas cuts off the mane of a wild horse in Sabucedo, Spain on July 6, 2012.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    3 comments

    I'm gonna send PETA these photos. I'm sure they'd love to know about this stuff.

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    Explore related topics: spain, animals, festival, culture, horses, rapa-das-bestas, shearing-of-the-beasts
  • 7
    Jun
    2012
    9:41am, EDT

    Saved from the menu, cute pangolins rescued in Thailand

    Sakchai Lalit / AP

    Two rescued pangolins sit in a basket during a news conference in Bangkok, Thailand, June 7. Thai customs rescued 110 pangolins worth about $35,500 that they say were to be sold outside the country as exotic food. The animals, hidden in a pickup truck, were seized at a customs checkpoint in Prachuap Khiri Khan province, south of Bangkok.

    Sakchai Lalit / AP

    A Thai customs official shows a rescued pangolin during a news conference in Bangkok, Thailand, June 7.

    Freeland Foundation via EPA

    A pangolin peers out of a cage after it was confiscated by Royal Thai Customs authorities in Pranburi, Thailand, June 7. Thai police confiscated a pickup truck with 110 pangolins after a high speed car chase when the truck failed to stop at a customs checkpoint and later crashed after being followed by authorities. The pangolins are alleged to be part of a large illegal wildlife trafficking operation, responsible for thousands of pangolins destined for markets in China and Vietnam, according to Freeland.

    By Phaedra Singelis, NBC News

    The rhino isn't the the only one being hunted to extinction. The wildlife smugglers continue to decimate this already endangered species. Just five days ago 171 more pangolins were rescued in Thailand and a few hours later 155 more were seized. 

    These adorable, shy and defenseless pangolins are hunted for their meat which is regarded as highly nutritious and its scales which are prescribed for ailments ranging from skin diseases to lack of milk in breast-feeding mothers. In China, they believe pangolin can boost sexual prowess. Like the rhino, most of the myths are just that.  

    Sometimes described as the walking pine cone, the species is quickly disappearing. The species, once prevalent, can hardly be found in Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia or Laos any more. Skyrocketing prices and a slow-breeding cycle has made it hard for those trying to save this scaley anteater. Too bad people don't want to keep them as pets instead -  they are a natural pest controller, feasting on termites, ants and other insects.

    More about the pangolin under pressure.

    More about the pangolin species and how you can help from the African Wildlife Foundation and at savepangolins.org

    10 comments

    F*cking dinks will eat ANYTHING in the world if they think it will give them a chubby.

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    Explore related topics: thailand, animals, smuggling, world-news, endangered-species, pangolin
  • 13
    May
    2012
    3:11pm, EDT

    Elephants run amok in India; boy killed, 25 injured

    By Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

    A 2-year-old boy was killed and 25 others were injured Sunday morning when three elephants broke loose and ran through the famous Koodalmanikyam temple in Kerala, a southeastern state in India, according to media reports.

    Sunday was the last day of a 10-day festival and the elephants were lined up to carry a deity to a holy bath before they ran amok, Gulfnews.com reported.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    When policemen fired their guns in the air marking the beginning of the processional, Kannan, one of the elephants, became scared and freed himself from his mahouts, or elephant handlers, trumpeting and waiving his tusk. When the elephant started to run, so did two other nearby elephants, CNN-IBN reported.

    The elephants frightened the crowd, sending people running for safety. During the melee, toddler Yadu Krishnana fell and was killed. The 25 others who were injured -- most of them during the stampede to get away from the elephant -- were hospitalized.


    After half an hour, the mahouts were able to regain control of the elephants, Gulfnews.com reported.

    Gulfnews.com reported that some have criticized the government for elephant-related injuries during the Hindu festival.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

    Last week more than 50 people in nearby Thrissur were injured after an elephant on parade turned violent, according to Gulfnews.com.

    Three years ago, an elephant at the Koodalmanikyam temple ran amok and killed three people. It is unclear whether that elephant was Kannan.

    During the festival, elephants outfitted in ornate caparisons carry a deity in a procession to the holy bath of the deity, or arattu, according to Hindu.com.  

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Report: Al-Qaida doctors trained to implant bombs in humans
    • France's 'Monsieur' Normal takes office ... unmarried
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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    42 comments

    Oh yes, Chris. Much better to chain them to a tree and starve them. I am human and I'm pissed at people who chain up elephants, so I can see why an elephant would be a tad pissed since this period includes pain and other discomfort as well as pesky humans restraining them.

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    Explore related topics: india, animals, religion, faith, elephants, kerala, featured
  • 7
    May
    2012
    6:56pm, EDT

    Oregon woman says she was attacked in 2009 by same cheetahs that mauled British tourist in South Africa

    Archibald D'mello via AP

    Violet D'Mello of Scotland was attacked by two young cheetahs in the petting area of the Kragga Kamma Game Park near Port Elizabeth, South Africa. Her husband captured the attack on camera. When Michelle Bodenheimer of Portland, Ore. heard about the attack, she was furious -- those same two cheetahs injured her three years before.

    By Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

    After a Scottish tourist was mauled last week by two young cheetahs in the petting area of a wildlife park in South Africa, an American woman came forward to say she was badly hurt by the same two cheetahs in 2009.

    Michelle Bodenheimer, a paralegal from Portland, Ore., said she was visiting the Kragga Kamma Game Park outside Port Elizabeth, South Africa, with her husband and friends. A park ranger took her to meet a docile, older cheetah named Duma in a large enclosure that included two 18-month-old cheetah brothers, Mark and Monty.

    As Duma luxuriated in the sun, Bodenheimer, 33, crouched down next to the big cat to have their photo taken. That’s when something from behind pushed her down.

    Photoblog: Woman survives cheetah attack by playing dead 


    “I didn’t feel any pain when it happened,” she told msnbc.com in a telephone interview on Monday. “I started to pick myself up and (a cheetah) was wrestling and playing with Duma. I felt something warm on my head, and there was blood just pouring out.”

    Bodenheimer believes the cheetahs were simply playing, but even so, they managed to shred her right ear, hook her ear canal with a claw and leave a 3- to 4-inch gash along her hairline. She suffered some hearing loss and still has scars, although they are fading.

    At the time park officials reassured her that  cheetahs Mark and Monty would be removed from the enclosure so the incident wouldn’t repeat itself.

    “It’s evident these cubs are too big to have an enclosure with people,” Bodenheimer said. “I don’t want the cats to be put down or chained up, but they need to be moved to an enclosure where they are in contact with no one but their caretakers."

    Archibald D'Mello via AP

    After Violet D'Mello was attacked by two cheetahs, a girl who was also attacked and her brother have not been able to sleep well at night. Their father said they wake up screaming.

    What would happen, Bodenheimer asked, if a tourist stepped on a cat’s paw, had the wrong smell or wore the wrong color? Mark and Monty may have been hand-raised by humans, but they are wild animals, she said.

    “You don’t know how they’re going to respond,” she said.

    Bodenheimer was treated at a hospital and South Africa and released a short time later.

    As for Violet D’Mello, the Scottish tourist who was attacked just over a week ago, she said was traumatized by the event.

    "They weren't being vicious. You could tell they (the cheetahs) were just excited, but it became serious very quickly," D’Mello told the Port Elizabeth Herald.

    D'Mello said her husband was taking pictures of her with the cheetahs at the game park when one grabbed the leg of a child. The girl got free, although with deep scratches the required stitches.

    Woman, child survive mauling by cheetahs at wildlife park

    Then the cats pounced on D’Mello from behind. One pawed her head, and the other bit her legs, pinning her down.

    "It all happened in just a few minutes," she said of the April 28 incident, "but it was a nightmare."

    She was treated at a local hospital for wounds on her head and face.

    The wounded child, Camryn Malan, had wanted to see the cheetahs after doing a school report on the animals. She reportedly received stitches on her leg.

    Camryn's father, Samuel Malan, said that Camryn and her brother don't sleep well.

    "They wake up screaming," he said. "I keep seeing it ... Just to see that thing biting that lady."

    Many animal preserves encourage tourists to interact with animals and cubs in separate enclosures under the watch of park rangers. That’s part of the fun, Bodenheimer said, and the idea is that tourists are then more connected to the game parks’ missions of rehabilitation and conservation of threatened and endangered animals.

    Bodenheimer e-mailed the South Africa park ranger last week to say she was appalled that he hadn’t learned from her experience. She said he defended himself, saying that Mark and Monty were cubs when she met them. (Though young, she said, the cubs were “the size of a great Dane with a kitten mentality.”)

    Park Manager Mike Cantor of Kragga Kamma Game Park told the Port Elizabeth Herald that he didn’t know what triggered the cheetahs' actions. He said the park is reviewing its child admission policy.

    "We have had incidents before where the results were just minor scratches, but nothing this hectic,” he said.

    Reading those comments, Bodenheimer was upset.

    “They paid my medical bills at the time,” she said. “They knew it was an issue.”

    Msnbc.com’s Miguel Llanos contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    • Meet Monsieur Caramel Pudding, France's next president
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    • Report: Fake bomb exposes London Olympic security
    • Woman, child survive mauling by cheetahs

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    48 comments

    By the way, did anyone notice the husband, being the big brave man he is, decided to take pictures of his wife being attacked by wild animals instead of trying to save her?

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  • 3
    Apr
    2012
    9:02am, EDT

    Hundreds of pit bulls rescued in the Philippines

    Bullit Marquez / AP

    A pit bull, one of more than 200 rescued over the weekend, sits chained inside a steel drum, April 3, 2012 in San Pablo city, Philippines.

    Bullit Marquez / AP

    Police officers pet one of the rescued pit bulls, April 3, 2012 at a coffee farm lot in San Pablo city, Laguna province, south of Manila, Philippines following their rescue.

    Bullit Marquez / AP

    A volunteer from the Philippine Animal Welfare Society (PAWS) pets a pit bull, one of more than 200 rescued from at a coffee farm lot in San Pablo city, Philippines, April 3, 2012.

    Bullit Marquez / AP

    A volunteer from the Philippine Animal Welfare Society (PAWS) emerges from a mobile veterinary clinic with a dead pit bull after being euthanized, April 3, 2012 at a coffee farm lot in San Pablo city, Laguna province, south of Manila, Philippines. Dozens of pit bulls, rescued from a dogfighting ring were euthanized by the animal welfare activists who said there are no facilities to rehabilitate them and prevent them from again being used in underground arenas.

    AP reports: Veterinarians and animal welfare workers Tuesday euthanized at least nine pit bulls rescued from a dogfighting ring in the Philippines because there are no facilities to rehabilitate them and prevent them from again being used in underground arenas.

    The plan is to put down dozens of the roughly 300 dogs rescued in separate raids late Friday in Laguna province south of Manlia, said Anna Cabrera of the Philippine Animal Welfare Society. Seventeen had been put to sleep a day after the raids.

    The health of the living dogs and the progress of rehabilitating them will determine how many of them ultimately survive.

    Police arrested eight South Koreans suspected of running an illegal online gambling operations in which players outside the Philippines bet on dogs fighting at a clandestine compound. Full story.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    25 comments

    I still say that any people that fight dogs should be chained together and forced to fight to the death.

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Phaedra Singelis

is a Supervising Producer at NBC News.com Previously she worked as an editor at the New York Times and the Washington Post in addition to working as a photojournalist at numerous newspapers.

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  • Girl's organs removed after vacation death; family believes they may have been sold (618)
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  • Price of a night's sleep? Israel reportedly spends $127K to build bedroom on PM's plane (445)
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