Advertisement
Advertisement
Americas and the Caribbean
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
German shepherd puppy Arkadas is held by a soldier at a military base in Mexico City on Wednesday. Photo: Reuters

Turkey gifts Mexico adorable pup after a rescue dog was lost on earthquake duty

  • Three-month-old German shepherd Arkadas – ‘friend’ in Turkish – will join the famed canine unit that helps locate survivors during natural disasters
  • The pup will be taught by the same trainer who cared for Proteo, the rescue dog that died on mission in Turkey after a massive magnitude 7.8 earthquake

Mexico’s army welcomed a new search puppy on Wednesday, gifted from Turkey following the death in the line of duty of a Mexican rescue dog who had been helping to find survivors of February’s massive earthquake near the Syrian border.

The three-month-old German shepherd will join Mexico’s famed canine unit, specialised in helping locate survivors in a country prone to earthquakes and other natural disasters.

The black and beige furball with perky ears and outsize paws has been named “Arkadas” – meaning “friend” in Turkish – following an online vote.

A soldier holds a German shepherd puppy named Arkadas, donated by the Turkish government, at a military base in Mexico City on Wednesday. Photo: Reuters

Arkadas will be trained by the same trainer who cared for Proteo, the rescue dog that died on mission in Turkey, the army said.

Mexico deployed rescue dogs to Turkey after the magnitude 7.8 earthquake shook a huge area near the southern border with Syria, causing at least 54,000 deaths across both nations.

Mexico paid homage to Proteo, also a German shepherd, at a military funeral earlier this year.

Canine crusaders: city leader hails Hong Kong dogs for Turkey quake zone work

Wearing a padded green harness featuring a tiny Mexican flag, Arkadas was welcomed to the force in a formal ceremony at a military base in Mexico City on Wednesday, joined by his new canine and human colleagues, standing to attention.

The excitable pup barked as Mexico’s national anthem blared out from speakers.

“Thanks to my friends from Mexico who welcomed me with great affection, I promise to do my best to be a great search and rescue dog,” the Mexican defence ministry tweeted on behalf of Arkadas.

Post