Tag: Rats

  • Cambodia unveils statue to honour famous landmine-sniffing rat

    Cambodia unveils statue to honour famous landmine-sniffing rat

    A famous mine-clearing rat, who was awarded a gold medal for his heroism, has been commemorated with the world’s first statue dedicated to a landmine-detecting rat.

    Magawa, who lived to eight years old, sniffed out over 100 landmines and other explosives in Cambodia during his five-year career that started in 2016.

    A statue of the rodent carved from local stone by artists was unveiled in Siem Reap, Cambodia on Friday, in time for the International Day for Mine Awareness on 4 April.

    Landmines remain an ongoing risk to Cambodia, and more than a million people continue to work and live on land contaminated by mines and unexploded ordnance, according to the United Nations.

    Magawa, an African giant pouched rat, was trained by the Belgian charity Apopo before moving to Cambodia to begin his bomb-sniffing career in 2016.

    Using his acute sense of smell and training to detect a chemical compound within explosives, Magawa would then alert human handlers of mines that could be later safely removed.

    During his time, Magawa cleared more than 141,000 square metres (1,517,711 sq ft) of land – the equivalent of 20 football pitches – and could search a field the size of a tennis court in just 20 minutes.

    In 2020, Magawa was awarded the PDSA Gold Medal – known as the George Cross for animals – for his “life-saving devotion to duty”. He was the first rat to be given the medal in the charity’s 77-year history.

    Following a short retirement due to old age and “slowing down”, Magawa died in 2022.

    Apopo’s Cambodia Programme Manager, Michael Raine, said on Friday the monument for Magawa “is a reminder to the international community that there’s still a job to be done here”.

    Cambodia now has a target date of 2030 to become mine-free, he added.

    The charity has been training its rodents, also known as HeroRATS, since the 1990s.

    Because of their small size, the rats are not heavy enough to detonate mines, making them a safer option than humans.

    They can even detect tuberculosis, an infectious disease that commonly affects the lungs, far quicker than it would be found in a lab using conventional microscopy, Apopo has said.

    They have also been trained to prevent illegal wildlife trafficking in Tanzania.

    Another Apopo-trained rat, named Ronin, set a new world record in 2025 by uncovering 109 landmines and 15 items of unexploded ordnance since 2021.

    Ronin’s impressive work in Cambodia’s northern Preah Vihear province surpassed the previous record held Magawa.

  • Rat earns world record for sniffing landmines in Cambodia

    Rat earns world record for sniffing landmines in Cambodia

    A landmine-hunting rat in Cambodia has set a new world record by sniffing out more than 100 mines and pieces of unexploded ordnance, a charity said Friday.

    Ronin, a giant African pouched rat, has tracked down 109 landmines and 15 other potentially deadly war remnants since his deployment to northern Preah Vihear province in August 2021, the Belgian charity APOPO said in a statement.

    Five-year-old Ronin has been named the most successful Mine Detection Rat (MDR) in the organisation’s history.

    “His exceptional accomplishments have earned him the Guinness World Records title for most landmines detected by a rat, highlighting the critical role of HeroRats in humanitarian demining,” APOPO said.

    Ronin beat the previous record, held by hero rodent Magawa who found 71 landmines and 38 UXOs during his five-year service before retirement in 2021.

    Magawa, who was awarded a gold medal for heroism for clearing mines from about 225,000 square metres of land — the equivalent of 42 football pitches — died in 2022.

    Ronin may have two years or more of detection work ahead of him, APOPO said.

    “He’s not just an asset, he’s a valued partner and colleague,” Phanny, Ronin’s handler, said in the statement.

    Cambodia remains littered with mines, discarded ammunition and other arms from decades of war starting in the 1960s.

    After more than 30 years of civil war ended in 1998, Cambodia was left as one of the most heavily mined countries in the world.

    Deaths from mines and unexploded ordnance are still common, with around 20,000 fatalities since 1979, and twice that number wounded.

    Two Cambodian toddlers were killed in February when a rocket-propelled grenade believed buried since the country’s civil war blew up near their homes in northwestern Siem Reap province.

    Cambodia had aimed to be mine-free by 2025, but the government pushed the deadline back by five years because of funding challenges and new landmine fields found along the Thai border.