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Can an animal be a person? Yes – if they are Pablo Escobar’s cocaine hippos

<span>Photograph: Fernando Vergara/AP</span>
Photograph: Fernando Vergara/AP

For all those who keep up with Pablo Escobar’s “cocaine hippos”, some happy news: a federal US court has recognised them as “interested persons” with legal rights.

The hippos owned by the late Colombian kingpin, and their many descendants, have been the subject of a lawsuit against the Colombian government, which is seeking to kill or sterilise them. From the four hippos illegally imported by Escobar in the 1980s, there are now as many as 80 of them, left to wander from his vast private zoo and posing a growing threat to people and biodiversity.

The ruling on Monday will have no bearing on the hippos’ actual fate, because the US court has no sway over Colombian authorities. But the Animal Legal Defense Fund, which lodged the case, has hailed it as a “narrow but profound” victory in its longstanding efforts to grant animals additional rights under US law.

Courts in India, Pakistan and Argentina have already recognised the legal “personhood” of animals; indeed, in Colombia, they are permitted to sue (a crux of the federal court’s decision to recognise Escobar’s hippos). But so far, efforts to extend their rights under US and UK laws have been met with scepticism.

Related: ‘I was terrified’: the vet sterilizing Pablo Escobar’s ‘cocaine hippos’

The scoffing provoked by the idea seems somewhat perverse when there is little proportional about either country’s relationship to animals. See: Tiger King, the chi-chi “pet boutiques” in even the most desolate of small towns and the mind-numbing saga of Geronimo the alpaca – all against a backdrop of the slaughter of animals for consumption. (Meat consumption actually increased through the pandemic.) We already privilege a minority of animals as people anyway.

But the case to watch is that of Happy the elephant, to be heard next year in the New York court of appeals. Happy’s self-appointed lawyers are invoking legal protections for imprisoned people to argue for her release from the Bronx Zoo to a sanctuary.

In the meantime, legal commentators have poured cold water on the significance of the cocaine-hippos court order. All it means, wrote litigators at Duane Morris in Washington, is that some hippos in Colombia may have some very limited rights in the US – “at least in the southern district of Ohio”.