A kestrel detained by Turkish villagers聽on suspicion of being a non-human Israeli spy has been cleared of any wrongdoing and released back into the wild.
Residents in the village of Altinavya , stamped with the words 鈥24311 Tel Avivunia Israel.鈥 Fearing the bird could be a spy, they turned the kestrel over to local authorities. Medical personnel at Elazig鈥檚 Firat University initially identified the bird as an 鈥淚sraeli Spy鈥 in their registration documents. However, a series of intensive medical examinations and x-rays determined that the bird posed no threat to the country. As it turns out, metal bands, such as the one the kestrel was wearing, are used to track bird migrations in the region.
Use of non-human spies has been a over the past few years. In May of 2012, Turkish authorities dissected a European bee-eater fearing that it could be carrying a listening device and last December, Sudanese authorities accused a captured eagle wearing a similar tag on its leg of being a spy for the Mossad, Israel鈥檚 secretive intelligence organization.
None of the birds were found guilty.