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Reward offered in presumed wolf death

October 5, 2019

Naya, born in Germany, was the first wolf to be seen in Belgium in a century. Environmental groups have blamed hunters for her disappearance, and are offering a €30,000 award for information about her presumed death.

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Belgian wolf Naya
Image: Getty Images/AFP/BELGA/AGENTSCHAP NATUUR EN BOS

Several environmental groups have offered a €30,000 ($33,000) reward for information over the presumed death of a wolf in Belgium.

The wolf, named Naya, was born in Germany but became the first to be spotted in Belgium in 100 years. She was first sighted in the Belgian province of Limbourg in January 2018 and was subsequently fitted with a tagged collar to track her movements.

Read more: Can tourism save wolves in Germany?

She gained a male companion in August 2018.

However, neither Naya nor the cubs she was carrying have been seen since May 2019, when they were detected by a night-vision camera operated by the regional nature agency ANB. The batteries in her electronic collar have since stopped working.

Three private environmental groups — Bird Protection Flanders, Animal Rights and the Nature Aid Center — initially offered €20,000 for information to help identify the suspected killers.

Bird Protection Flanders later announced that an unnamed Belgian businessman had contributed an additional €10,000.

The return of the wolves to Germany

Hunters to blame: environmentalists

According to Belgian media, environmental groups have blamed hunters for Naya's disappearance.

"Everything shows that the public no longer accepts that some people give themselves the right to decide which animals are allowed to live," the groups wrote in a statement.

Read more: Furry head of ice age wolf found in Siberia

In an interview with local media, a Flemish hunters' association said the accusations were "scandalous." It said it may file a lawsuit for defamation against two Belgian conservation groups.

Three other wolves have been sighted since Naya's arrival, wandering in and out of Belgium's wooded areas on the Dutch and German borders, according to ANB.

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John Silk Editor and writer for English news, as well as the Culture and Asia Desks.@JSilk