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Thousands flock to see dwarf cow in Bangladesh

Pictures of Rani on social media platforms have set off a tourist frenzy



People take pictures with a dwarf cow named Rani, whose owners applied to the Guinness Book of Records claiming it to be the smallest cow in the world, at a cattle farm in Charigram, about 25km from Savar on July 6, 2021.
Image Credit: AFP

CHARIGRAM, Bangladesh: Thousands of people are defying a nationwide coronavirus lockdown in Bangladesh to see Rani, a 51-centimetre tall cow whose owners claim it is the world’s smallest.

The 23-month-old dwarf cow has become a media star with scores of newspapers and television stations throwing the spotlight on the tiny bovine at a farm near Dhaka.

Pictures of Rani on social media platforms have set off a tourist frenzy.

Despite a nationwide transport shutdown because of record coronavirus infections and deaths, people are flocking in rickshaws to the farm in Charigram, 30 kilometres (19 miles) southwest of Dhaka.

Rani is 66 centimetres long and weighs only 26 kilos but the owners say it is 10 centimetres shorter than the smallest cow in Guinness World Records.
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“I have never seen anything like this in my life. Never,” said Rina Begum, 30, who came from a neighbouring town.

Rani is 66 centimetres long and weighs only 26 kilos  but the owners say it is 10 centimetres shorter than the smallest cow in Guinness World Records.

M.A. Hasan Howlader, manager of Shikor Agro farm, used a tape measure to show dozens of onlookers how Rani dwarfs her closest rival Manikyam, a cow in the Indian state Kerala that currently holds the world record.

“People come long distances despite the coronavirus lockdown. Most want to take selfies with Rani,” Howlader told AFP, adding Guinness World Records had promised a decision in three months.

“More than 15,000 people have come to see Rani in the past three days alone,” he said.

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“Honestly speaking, we are tired.”

Guinness World Records said Manikyam, from the Vechur breed, was 61 centimetres high in June 2014.

Rani is a Bhutti, or Bhutanese, cow which is prized for its meat in Bangladesh. The other Bhuttis on the farm are twice Rani’s size.

“We did not expect such huge interest. We did not think people would leave their homes because of the worsening virus situation. But they have come here in droves,” the manager said.

Sajedul Islam, the government’s chief vet for the region, said Rani is a product of “genetic inbreeding” and was unlikely to become any bigger.

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Islam said he had told the farm to restrict the tourist influx.

“I told them they should not allow so many people to crowd the farm. They may carry diseases here that threaten Rani’s health,” he said.

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