Land Rover->ke46 has just auctioned off the 2 millionth Defender->ke1858 at perhaps the highest cost ever given for the brand’s most iconic model. The auction brought in a staggering £400,000, or roughly $600,000 U.S. dollars. The winning bidder hails from Qatar and placed his bids though the phone.

This particular Defender might look familiar. We reported about Land Rover’s big hubbub about its construction back in the spring, having a star-studded cast of “assembly line workers,” including adventurer Bear Grylls, actress Virginia McKenna, and the sons of Land Rover’s founder, Stephen and Nick Wilks.

All the proceeds from the auction->ke2262 will be donated to Land Rover’s humanitarian and conservation partners, the international Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, and to the Born Free Foundation. Both groups will use the funds for specific causes.

The IFRC will use the funds to help communities in Southeast Nepal improve preparedness for natural disasters. The Born Free Foundation will use its donation to help support the “Project Lion Rover” wildlife conservation initiative in Meru National Park, located in Kenya.

“We are extremely grateful to Land Rover for so generously donating half the proceeds of the sale of this one-off vehicle towards our work in Nepal,” says Mike Adamson, Chief Executive of The British Red Cross. “The Red Cross has used Defenders in humanitarian work and relief efforts in the U.K. and around the world since the early 1950s and has benefited from Land Rover’s support on many occasions through vehicle donations and loans.”

The Defender will continue to be in production through January of 2016, when Land Rover will officially dispatch historied model.

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