A number of investigations have been launched after a Spanish man in Kenya posted movies of himself pouring beer down an elephant’s trunk – sparking anger on social media.
He was filmed in a wildlife reservation ingesting from a can of Tusker, a well-liked native beer, earlier than giving the remainder of it to the elephant.
“Only a tusker with a tusked pal,” he captioned one clip posted on Instagram, which was later deleted from his account after a backlash from Kenyans within the feedback.
The BBC analysed the footage and was capable of authenticate it as real. The panorama and a well known bull elephant level to it being filmed on the Ol Jogi Conservancy within the central county of Laikipia.
A member of the employees contacted by the BBC on the privately owned wildlife sanctuary was shocked by the behaviour – and mentioned the movies could be handed on to “the related authorities”.
“This could by no means have occurred. We’re a conservation and we won’t enable that to occur,” the staffer, solely recognized as Frank, mentioned.
“We do not even enable folks to go close to the elephants.”
The Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) was additionally probing the incident, the company’s spokesperson Paul Udoto informed the BBC.
The person concerned doesn’t use his identify on his social media accounts, which all have a variation of the phrase Skydive_Kenya.
In one other clip shared on Instagram on Tuesday, he’s seen feeding two elephants with carrots after which saying: “We’re on beer time.”
The Instagram movies attracted tons of of crucial feedback – with some calling for the person’s deportation – earlier than the posts had been pulled down.
The elephant that was given the beer is large in dimension, with lengthy tusks – one specifically is distinctive as it’s broken.
From different photos and movies posted on-line, it matches the outline of Bupa, a pleasant male at Ol Jogi whose photograph is usually shared by guests.
Bupa was rescued from a mass elephant cull in Zimbabwe in 1989 and dropped at the conservancy when he was eight years outdated.
Ol Jogi says it’s house to about 500 elephants and regards itself one of many pioneers in rehabilitating animal orphans and releasing them again to the wild.
The person featured within the beer movies, who describes himself as an “adrenaline junkie” on TikTok, had posted a video on Monday by which he’s seen on the close by Ol Pejeta Conservancy feeding a rhino with carrots.
“He has additionally damaged our guidelines as a result of he was not supposed to the touch the rhinos as a result of they aren’t pets,” Dylan Habil from Ol Pejeta informed the BBC.
He confirmed the rhino within the footage was from their nature reserve however the elephant within the beer video didn’t belong to them.
Dr Winnie Kiiru, a Kenyan biologist and elephant conservationist, termed the vacationer’s behaviour “unlucky” because it had endangered his life and that of the elephant.
“About 95% of elephants in Kenya are wild and it’s fallacious to have social media posts that give the impression you can get near the elephants and feed them,” she informed the BBC.
The incident comes barely per week after a gaggle of vacationers had been filmed blocking migrating wildebeest at Kenya’s Maasai Mara through the annual wildlife migration – one of many world’s best wildlife spectacles.
The viral footage confirmed guests leaping out of safari automobiles, crowding riverbanks and forcing wildebeests into crocodile-infested waters – sparking outage.
Following the incident, the tourism and wildlife ministry introduced stricter guidelines, directing tour operators to implement park guidelines by guaranteeing guests stay inside automobiles besides in designated areas.
It additionally pledged to enhance signage throughout the wildlife parks and intensify customer schooling on security guidelines.
The Maasai Mara wildebeest migration attracts hundreds of holiday makers yearly and is considered one in all Kenya’s most prized pure heritage property.
Correction 29 September 2025: This story has been corrected to indicate the identify of the Ol Pejeta Conservancy official as Dylan Habil, and never Thige Njuguna as earlier acknowledged.
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