The biggest ever multi-species airlift from Ireland to benefit Rwandan genocide widows takes off this October and pigs might fly in 1,500 strong cargo to include cows, pigs, goats and chicks.
The countdown is on for the biggest multi species airlift ever from Ireland and one of the biggest in the world after aid agency Bóthar confirmed its 25th anniversary ‘Ark’ will take flight from Shannon Airport on Monday October 10th.
Complete with a live cargo of 40 in-calf dairy cows, 260 pigs, 200 dairy goats and 1,000 chicks, the Bóthar Ark will be bound for Rwanda where it will be divided among widows of the horrific genocide of the mid-1990s.
Bóthar has announced that Shannon Airport will be the official aviation partner for the airlift from Shannon. The historic flight marks the 25th anniversary of the first Bóthar flight, which left the same airport with a cargo of just 20 cows. The inaugural flight was intended as a one-off by a group of Mid-West farmers, among them legendary farm leader TJ Maher, as their way of marking the 300th anniversary of the Treaty of Limerick.
Confirming the airlift and Shannon’s designation as the aviation partner, Bóthar CEO Dave Moloney said that final preparations are now in place for what will be the most significant airlift of Bóthar’s quarter of a century of livestock aid activity. “This is the most important airlift we have ever pulled together, for many reasons. It’s our biggest airlift in terms of numbers and species and, in that regard, a record in an Irish context. It also marks our 25th birthday as an aid organisation and what a journey it has been.
He added “There’s also a great deal of nostalgia, not just because of the birthday but because we are back where it all started, at Shannon Airport. We have since turned into one of Ireland’s best known charities and which transforms the lives of thousands of the world’s poorest annually with gifts of food and income producing livestock.”
Niall Maloney, Airport Operations Director, Shannon Airport commented “Bóthar is like an old friend now for us at Shannon and we are delighted to support them. They have been airlifting cows, in particular, from here to some of the most-needy people in the world for a quarter of a century. It’s a remarkable contribution, not least when you think of the organisation’s origins.
“It was just supposed to have been a once-off. Thankfully for tens of thousands of people across the world, whose lives have been changed beyond their wildest hopes by the gift of food and income producing animals, it hasn’t stopped rolling since.”