Seventeen Bongos Take Flight: DHL Delivers Endangered Antelopes to Kenyan Sanctuary

By Maria Kalamatas | The Logistic News
June 10, 2025 – Section: Air / CSR & Special Transport

They left Florida before sunrise, not in silence, but with the subdued rustle of movement from inside their crates. Seventeen eastern bongos—majestic, elusive, and perilously close to extinction—boarded a DHL cargo aircraft bound for Kenya in a relocation effort that conservationists describe as one of the most delicate of the year.

The animals, easily recognized by their striped hides and elegant horns, were raised in managed care environments across the United States. Now, they’re returning to the continent where their species belongs, through a partnership between DHL Global Forwarding and the conservation group Tusk.

“It took months of planning,” said Dr. Helena Moore, a wildlife veterinarian involved in the mission. “Every hour of the journey had to be anticipated—temperature, noise, light, sedation, hydration. These animals aren’t passengers. They’re responsibility.”

Custom-designed transport crates, padded and ventilated, housed each bongo individually. Vets checked vitals at each transfer point, while DHL personnel managed routing with precision—ensuring minimal handling and maximum speed. From tarmac to sanctuary, the goal was simple: don’t disrupt the rhythm of the animals.

The flight landed in Nairobi under overcast skies. Ground handlers moved swiftly but calmly, knowing that stress can kill more efficiently than any predator. Within hours, the bongos reached Imire Sanctuary, where they’ll spend weeks adjusting before being introduced into semi-wild enclosures.

Why now? Because fewer than 100 eastern bongos survive in the wild. Kenya’s mountain forests, once home to thousands, now echo with silence. This operation is part of a broader push to re-establish a viable population, one animal at a time.

“You can’t rebuild a species from spreadsheets,” said Caroline Musila, who oversees Imire’s rewilding program. “You need partners. You need flights. And above all, you need to care.”

DHL isn’t new to this kind of mission. The logistics giant has helped relocate rhinos, sea turtles, and even pandas in past years. But for many on the team, this shipment held a different kind of weight.

“Seventeen lives in the air, depending on every small decision we made on the ground,” said Emmanuel Richter, DHL’s lead coordinator on the project. “It’s not just logistics—it’s legacy.”

Maria Kalamatas
Senior Correspondent – Conservation & Logistics
The Logistic News

The post Seventeen Bongos Take Flight: DHL Delivers Endangered Antelopes to Kenyan Sanctuary appeared first on The Logistic News.

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