LONDON – Police ran down leads and the Royal Navy was on alert Thursday in the search for Toga, an 18-inch-tall baby penguin stolen from an Isle of Wight zoo Saturday night, creating a national soap opera rivaling Elton John’s gay wedding for media coverage.
“We’re all a bit ragged here, to say the least,” said Kath Bright, manager of Amazon World Zoo Park, which has received nearly $13,000 in donations – including $600 from the United States – to offer as a reward for the safe return of the nine-pound South African Jackass Penguin.
The theft has been covered exhaustively in the British media – and television stations as far away as Australia – rivaling Prime Minister Tony Blair’s surprise visit to Iraq for airtime Thursday. Sky News, which had a grim-faced reporter live at Amazon World, showed photos of Toga throughout the day and urged anyone with information to call in.
“No questions asked,” an anchor said. “We just want to get Toga back to his mum and dad.”
The saga took a dark turn early Thursday following anonymous phone calls to Amazon World and to GMTV, a BBC morning television show, in which the caller said he had dumped Toga into Portsmouth harbor in a plastic bag.
Bright said the calls seemed to jibe with a report the zoo received Wednesday night. A boater returning from a trip through Portsmouth harbor told a friend: “It must be cold out there, I’ve just seen a penguin.” Bright said the friend, realizing it must have been Toga, called the zoo.
Police said they were investigating those reports. A spokesman for the Royal Navy said that while sailors were not actively searching for Toga, they were keeping their eyes open around the naval dockyards at Portsmouth, south of London.
As of Thursday night, Toga was still missing, and Bright said zookeepers were beginning to worry he could starve to death. Bright said that before the theft, the 3-month-old was still being fed by his father, Oscar, and his mother, Kyala. Because the parents simply regurgitate food directly down the baby’s throat, Bright said, Toga wouldn’t know how to find his own food and wouldn’t accept any from humans.
“He hasn’t got a clue,” Bright said.
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