Somewhere in the thorny scrublands of Somaliland, a cheetah mother leaves her two-week-old cubs tucked in a burrow while she hunts for food. By the time she returns, they are gone. Two men have scooped them up, trading the cubs to a middleman for about fifty dollars each. The tiny animals, eyes barely open, are stuffed into a box and loaded into the back of a truck headed north. If they survive the next few weeks of hunger, disease, and handling, they will be smuggled across the Gulf of Aden and sold in Saudi Arabia or the United Arab Emirates, where each cub may fetch as much as fifteen thousand dollars.
This is the hidden reality of the cheetah cub trade. Every year, an estimated 300 cubs are snatched from the wild in East Africa. Most never survive the journey. Those that do face lifespans shortened by stress and neglect, all to become status symbols in the hands of the wealthy elite.
Continue reading Stolen Futures: The Cheetah Cub Trade from East Africa to the Gulf