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Colombia gives chunk of druglord Escobar's ranch to conflict victims
Colombia has handed over a chunk of deceased drug lord Pablo Escobar's ranch, famous for its "cocaine" hippos, to women caught up in the country's armed conflict, President Gustavo Petro said Wednesday.
Escobar, once head of the powerful Medellin Cartel, was one of the richest men on the planet in the late 1980s, with Forbes magazine estimating his fortune at $25 billion.
His lavish 4,000-hectare Hacienda Napoles estate in northwest Antioquia department, which he filled with exotic animals, including hippos, became a symbol of his power and wealth.
After he was shot dead by police in 1993, the state took over the estate and leased it to local authorities, who turned it into a successful theme park, complete with a hotel and zoo.
Petro said that part of the estate had now been handed over to victims of Colombia's more-than-six-decade armed conflict between left-wing guerrillas, drug cartels, right-wing paramilitaries and the state.
"We have begun to recover the Napoles estate for the victims," Petro wrote on X.
The government said that 120 hectares (297 acres) of land had been given to local women farmers.
The women received a loan of the land from the local Puerto Triunfo municipality in 2017, but according to the national government, were later evicted by the police.
"I feel very happy because today there are women who have hope, who have land for life," Millinery Correa, one of the beneficiaries, said in a video shared by the state-run National Land Agency.
Land ownership has been a key driver of Colombia's conflict.
In May, Petro had asked that Escobar's estate be included in a land reform program, under which thousands of hectares of land, including some properties previously owned by drug traffickers, be given to rural Colombians.
Tourism companies operating at Hacienda Napoles had protested the plan to break up the estate, pointing to its role in attracting tourists to the region.
Hacienda Napoles is famous for the replica plane that he mounted over the entrance gate -- an emblem, since removed, of the planeloads of drugs he smuggled into the United States -- as well as its hippo population.
Escobar brought a small number of the African beasts to Colombia in the late 1980s.
After his death the animals were left to roam freely beyond the estate's boundaries and to multiply. They now number around 150.
Colombia has declared them an invasive species and made plans to transfer 70 of them to overseas sanctuaries.
F.Bennett--AMWN