Park rangers in Africa are facing a crisis as they encounter increasingly dangerous armed poachers. A nonprofit offers them backup from a group of people with skills honed on a different kind of battleground.
In 2013, Ryan Tate founded Vetpaw, which pairs U.S. military veterans with park rangers in wildlife-rich areas in Africa to teach combat skills and to help spot and stop poachers. His inspiration: a documentary on the killing of African elephants and rhinoceroses.
The documentary featured a female rhino whose face had been mutilated by poachers hoping to sell her tusks. “When I saw that, I cried like a baby. I said, ‘Well, this is an injustice,’ ” Tate recalls.
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