The media reported on Thursday that Darfur authorities found an Israeli Park Services GPS chip attached to the bird.
The
vulture was on an espionage mission for the Tel Aviv regime, the media
stated, adding that the bird had a leg band with labels that read in
Hebrew, “Israel Nature Service” and “Hebrew University, Jerusalem.”
The equipment fastened to the vulture was capable of taking photos and sending them back to Israel.
However,
Israel’s National Parks Service has denied the reports and said that
both the GPS chip and the device were used by ecologists to track
migration.
On October 24, Sudanese Minister of Information Ahmed
Bilal Osman said four Israeli warplanes had
attacked a weapons
production factory in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, killing at least
two people.
Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir said on October 26
that the “reckless behavior is a manifestation of Israel’s concerns and
nervousness about the political and social upheavals in the region and
about the progress in Sudan.”
Sudan is not the only state reporting the capture of a bird with Israeli spying equipment attached to it.
In
2011, Saudi media reported that authorities had captured a griffon
vulture with Israeli spying equipment attached to one of its legs, and a
“Tel Aviv University” label.
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