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World’s Shortest Cow Gets Posthumous Recognition

    Advertisement A knee-high celebrity cow that became a sensation in Bangladesh has won posthumous recognition as the shortest on the planet just weeks … Continue reading World’s Shortest Cow Gets Posthumous Recognition


(FILES) In this file photo taken on July 6, 2021 people take pictures of a dwarf cow named Rani, whose owners applied to the Guinness Book of Records claiming it to be the smallest cow in the world, at a cattle farm in Charigram, about 25 km from Savar. – A knee-high celebrity cow that became a sensation in Bangladesh has won posthumous recognition as the shortest on the planet just weeks after its untimely demise. (Photo by Munir Uz zaman / AFP)
(FILES) A knee-high celebrity cow that became a sensation in Bangladesh has won posthumous recognition as the shortest on the planet just weeks after its untimely demise. (Photo by Munir Uz zaman / AFP)

 

 

A knee-high celebrity cow that became a sensation in Bangladesh has won posthumous recognition as the shortest on the planet just weeks after its untimely demise.

Rani, just 50.8 centimetres (20 inches) high, became an instant internet celebrity with tens of thousands of people rushing to the farm she lived on outside Dhaka for a glimpse of the miniature cow.

But just after its owners applied to Guinness World Records, tragedy struck on August 19 when the beloved bovine suddenly died due to a sudden internal build-up of gas.

The cow’s owner Kazi Mohammad Abu Sufian said he received an email on Monday from Guinness World Records saying that Rani’s application had been accepted.

A statement on the Guinness website confirmed the miniature Bhutti world-record cow’s status, beating the previous holder, an Indian cow named Manikyam that stood 61 centimetres from hoof to withers.

 

(FILES) In this file photo taken on July 6, 2021 people take pictures of a dwarf cow named Rani, whose owners applied to the Guinness Book of Records claiming it to be the smallest cow in the world, at a cattle farm in Charigram, about 25 km from Savar. (Photo by Munir Uz zaman / AFP)

 

“We sent several video of Rani in line with Guinness World Records prescriptions. We have also sent the post-mortem report to the Guinness authorities to see that there was nothing unusual about her death,” Sufian told AFP.

Sufian said he had also sent Guinness Rani’s medical records after they asked whether she had received hormone injections.

“We have a mixed feelings after Rani got the recognition. We are happy that she got her due honours. But we are at the same very sad because she is no more with us,” Sufian said.

“Her carer burst out crying as soon as we told him the news.”