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Feliks the eagle back home in Serbia after kidnap and illegal sale ordeal in Middle East

Feliks, an Eastern imperial eagle, looks out from a cage at Palic Zoo, 24 June, 2026
Feliks, an Eastern imperial eagle, looks out from a cage at Palic Zoo, 24 June, 2026 Copyright  AP Photo
Copyright AP Photo
By Gavin Blackburn
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Feliks' ordeal highlighted both the widespread practice of profit-driven, illegal animal trade and an unfaltering struggle by animal protection groups to counter it.

Feliks the eagles journey resembles a Hollywood movie script, with kidnappers, smugglers and clandestine border crossings.

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The year-old eastern imperial eagle from Serbia started flying in August and later set off on his first migratory flight toward the Middle East, only to be captured by poachers, sold illegally and retrieved in a daring cross-border mission.

While Feliks returned home safely last week, his ordeal highlighted both the widespread practice of profit-driven, illegal animal trade and an unfaltering struggle by animal protection groups to counter it.

“It’s getting worse year after year, season after season, day after day,” said Michel Sawan, the head of the Lebanese Association for Migratory Birds, who played a key role in Feliks's rescue.

"We can actually barely believe...the mission was done successfully."

Feliks, an Eastern imperial eagle, looks out from a cage at Palic Zoo, 24 June, 2026
Feliks, an Eastern imperial eagle, looks out from a cage at Palic Zoo, 24 June, 2026 AP Photo

Captured in Syria

The eastern imperial eagle is an imposing bird of prey with a wingspan of up to 2 metres. The protected species in Serbia was down to a single breeding pair back in 2017 but has recovered thanks to the work of the Bird Protection and Study Society of Serbia (BPSSS).

The precious offspring of a new generation of eagles, Feliks was ringed and got a “small backpack” with a transmitter before setting off last August, Uros Stojiljkovic from the BPSSS said.

“Everything seemed normal,” Stojiljkovic added. “We didn't dream all this would happen."

Feliks first circled close to home before heading southeast across North Macedonia, Greece and Turkey. His tracking signal was lost in late October in Syria.

“We hoped this was because there was a problem with the transmitter or something,” Stojiljkovic said.

This graphic, made available by the BPSSS, shows a map of the flight route taken by Feliks
This graphic, made available by the BPSSS, shows a map of the flight route taken by Feliks Bird Protection and Study Society of Serbia via AP/Copyright 2026 The AP. All rights reserved

Weeks passed by before the news came from Sawan: Feliks was put up for sale after he was captured by poachers who catch migratory birds by placing water in the desert, or shoot at them, capture them with nets or even chase them with motorcycles.

“When Felix was caught at first, it was posted on many WhatsApp groups for selling wild birds illegally trapped in Syria,” Sawan said. “I started my phone calls with people I know in Syria and we were able to reach out for Feliks.”

Paying money to smugglers was out of the question but Sawan wasn't ready to give up.

From smugglers to refugees and a Serbian army plane

Feliks was sold to a buyer in Lebanon and resold back into Syria before Sawan managed to retrieve him through a network of associates. Getting Feliks over the border into Lebanon was then impeded by fighting in the region and bad weather, he said.

Eventually, a group of refugees carried Feliks in a potato sack over the Nahr al-Kabir river on the northern border between Syria and Lebanon.

“It was crazy,” Sawan said.

Now safely in Sawan's bird sanctuary in Beirut, Feliks still needed to get back home, a task that became virtually impossible after the start of the Iran war in February.

After three failed attempts, the Serbian army came to the rescue through its troops serving in the UN peacekeeping mission in Lebanon.

Finally, on 22 June, Feliks arrived back in Serbia aboard a military transport plane.

A worker inside the cage at Palic Zoo looks among trees for Feliks, 24 June, 2026
A worker inside the cage at Palic Zoo looks among trees for Feliks, 24 June, 2026 AP Photo

Feliks and other birds also face dangers at home

Feliks is now in a zoo in northern Serbia where he must be quarantined for 21 days. Experts from the BPSSS say the eagle will get a new transmitter before he is released again.

Over the past decade, the BPSSS has worked hard to plant trees and set up bird platforms across the flat agricultural plain of northern Serbia.

In 2017, volunteers organised a 24-hour watch of the remaining nesting pair to make sure they were safe. A European Union-backed project later helped beef up the population to the current 29 breeding couples.

Dangers are still many, from accidental poisoning to electrical cables, Stojiljkovic said.

“Feliks went full circle and came back to where he had set off,” Stojiljkovic said. “Let's hope he won't be bored here.”

Additional sources • AP

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