
In 2005, a 12-year-old Ethiopian girl was kidnapped by seven men who intended to force her into marriage. When police and relatives found her a week later, three lions were standing guard around her. The kidnappers were gone. A wildlife expert said the girl's crying may have sounded like a mewing lion cub, which could explain why they protected her instead of attacking. The lions left quietly as the humans approached.
Three Lions Guarded a Kidnapped 12-Year-Old Until Police Found Her
In June 2005, seven men abducted a 12-year-old girl in southwestern Ethiopia. Their plan was to force her into marriage with one of them — a practice that, despite being illegal, remained common in rural parts of the country.
Police and relatives searched for a week. When they finally found her on the outskirts of Bita Genet, she was not alone.
The Lions
Three lions were standing around the girl. The kidnappers were gone. According to Sergeant Wondimu Wedajo, who led the search, the lions had apparently chased off her captors and then stayed with the girl for about half a day before police arrived.
"They stood guard until we found her, and then they just left her like a gift and went back into the forest," Wondimu told the Associated Press.
Why Didn't They Attack Her?
Stuart Williams, a wildlife expert with Ethiopia's rural development ministry, offered a theory: "A young girl whimpering could be mistaken for the mewing sound from a lion cub, which in turn could explain why they didn't eat her."
Lions are not known for protecting humans. They are apex predators responsible for dozens of deaths in rural Africa each year. Whatever the reason — mistaken identity, simple indifference, or something no one can explain — the outcome was the same. The girl survived.
Aftermath
The girl was found "shocked and terrified" with visible cuts from beatings during the kidnapping. Four of the seven abductors were arrested. Three remained at large.
The United Nations estimated at the time that more than 70% of marriages in Ethiopia involved some form of abduction. The story brought brief international attention to the practice, though enforcement of existing laws remained difficult in rural areas.
Frequently Asked Questions
Did three lions really guard a kidnapped girl in Ethiopia?
Why didn't the lions attack the girl?
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Verified Fact
Verified via AP wire report June 22, 2005. Covered by Guardian, BBC, NBC, CBC. Primary source: Sgt. Wondimu Wedajo. Expert: Stuart Williams. TruthOrFiction marks as Disputed only on interpretation of lion intent, not on facts.
The Guardian / Associated Press