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Four male mountain bongos arrived in Nairobi on April 29, 2026, after being sent from a zoo in the Czech Republic, in a repatriation hailed by Kenyan officials as a “historic homecoming.” The animals were received at Kenya’s main airport by Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi and Tourism Minister Rebecca Miano and moved to the Mount Kenya Wildlife Conservancy (MKWC), a private reserve that already houses about 102 bongos.
Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) said the four will undergo quarantine, acclimatisation and monitoring under a national recovery plan before being integrated into the breeding programme to strengthen the species’ genetic pool.
The mountain bongo, a large, chestnut-red antelope with white stripes, has suffered steep declines from poaching, disease and habitat loss; fewer than 100 are estimated to remain in the wild.
Previous repatriations include animals returned from the United States and Europe in recent years.
Conservation partners warned of risks including tick-borne disease and stressed staged release protocols.
Kenyan authorities aim to raise the wild population substantially by 2050 through coordinated breeding, monitoring and habitat protection efforts.





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