Berliner Boersenzeitung - Fugitive tiger euthanised in South Africa after attacks

EUR -
AED 4.290221
AFN 81.19713
ALL 97.720048
AMD 448.36783
ANG 2.091743
AOA 1071.241313
ARS 1538.229669
AUD 1.789799
AWG 2.102763
AZN 1.995111
BAM 1.968186
BBD 2.359046
BDT 142.104284
BGN 1.956399
BHD 0.440469
BIF 3446.19494
BMD 1.168202
BND 1.503357
BOB 8.074331
BRL 6.312141
BSD 1.168353
BTN 102.428172
BWP 15.730001
BYN 3.857121
BYR 22896.752824
BZD 2.347021
CAD 1.609367
CDF 3376.103258
CHF 0.942306
CLF 0.028494
CLP 1117.793701
CNY 8.38675
CNH 8.393348
COP 4696.754833
CRC 591.057564
CUC 1.168202
CUP 30.957344
CVE 110.80415
CZK 24.473006
DJF 207.613216
DKK 7.462285
DOP 71.756816
DZD 151.713517
EGP 56.596335
ERN 17.523025
ETB 163.402255
FJD 2.629975
FKP 0.86486
GBP 0.865141
GEL 3.14827
GGP 0.86486
GHS 12.295344
GIP 0.86486
GMD 84.697106
GNF 10134.149407
GTQ 8.964414
GYD 244.454082
HKD 9.170325
HNL 30.78209
HRK 7.534085
HTG 153.183844
HUF 395.544867
IDR 18964.585987
ILS 3.994233
IMP 0.86486
INR 102.288147
IQD 1530.344194
IRR 49210.496251
ISK 143.197888
JEP 0.86486
JMD 186.896167
JOD 0.828307
JPY 172.956349
KES 151.286673
KGS 102.042156
KHR 4680.983601
KMF 492.39668
KPW 1051.308534
KRW 1615.517602
KWD 0.356851
KYD 0.97369
KZT 631.967644
LAK 25233.155843
LBP 104647.481206
LKR 351.793894
LRD 235.387105
LSL 20.642267
LTL 3.449396
LVL 0.706633
LYD 6.337508
MAD 10.552427
MDL 19.623755
MGA 5186.815513
MKD 61.575411
MMK 2452.330152
MNT 4201.308917
MOP 9.447662
MRU 46.658469
MUR 53.304611
MVR 17.991808
MWK 2028.579211
MXN 21.710018
MYR 4.931566
MZN 74.717583
NAD 20.64211
NGN 1792.6129
NIO 42.931055
NOK 11.929915
NPR 163.874286
NZD 1.960908
OMR 0.44918
PAB 1.168428
PEN 4.119372
PGK 4.845003
PHP 66.49229
PKR 329.958903
PLN 4.255272
PYG 8751.071855
QAR 4.252836
RON 5.0624
RSD 117.144905
RUB 92.811661
RWF 1686.883218
SAR 4.384387
SBD 9.614991
SCR 17.196337
SDG 701.498651
SEK 11.149258
SGD 1.498552
SHP 0.918023
SLE 27.090028
SLL 24496.603437
SOS 667.61303
SRD 43.712352
STD 24179.416076
STN 24.941106
SVC 10.223337
SYP 15188.899789
SZL 20.641815
THB 37.80256
TJS 10.924954
TMT 4.100388
TND 3.36267
TOP 2.736049
TRY 47.612979
TTD 7.928404
TWD 34.992665
TZS 2870.851927
UAH 48.477778
UGX 4159.17433
USD 1.168202
UYU 46.663662
UZS 14646.331526
VES 155.081751
VND 30688.657994
VUV 139.658608
WST 3.105227
XAF 660.153833
XAG 0.030628
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.157123
XCG 2.105651
XDR 0.820472
XOF 658.277823
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.689683
ZAR 20.540338
ZMK 10515.219835
ZMW 26.961403
ZWL 376.160463
  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    73.08

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0107

    23.56

    -0.05%

  • BCC

    3.5200

    84.26

    +4.18%

  • RYCEF

    0.6400

    14.94

    +4.28%

  • NGG

    -0.9500

    70.28

    -1.35%

  • RIO

    0.9600

    63.1

    +1.52%

  • SCS

    0.2300

    16.19

    +1.42%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.38

    -0.07%

  • RELX

    -0.2100

    47.83

    -0.44%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.08

    +0.09%

  • GSK

    0.5100

    38.22

    +1.33%

  • BCE

    0.1500

    24.5

    +0.61%

  • AZN

    1.2700

    75.34

    +1.69%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    11.54

    +0.26%

  • BTI

    -0.4100

    57.92

    -0.71%

  • BP

    0.1200

    34.07

    +0.35%

Fugitive tiger euthanised in South Africa after attacks
Fugitive tiger euthanised in South Africa after attacks / Photo: LUCA SOLA - AFP

Fugitive tiger euthanised in South Africa after attacks

A tiger which escaped from a farm and roamed the countryside outside of Johannesburg for four days, attacking a man and killing several animals, was euthanised on Wednesday.

Text size:

The tiger's breakout and eventual killing has reignited concerns over South Africa's legal and flourishing breeding of big cats.

The eight-year-old female Bengal tiger was put down just before dawn after it killed a dog, the latest in a series of attacks that followed its escape from an enclosure at a private farm on Saturday, Gresham Mandy, a member of a local safety volunteer group in Walkerville, 30 kilometres (18 miles) south of Johannesburg, told AFP.

Tigers are not native to South Africa, but in recent years their rearing has become common in the country, where they are owned as pets or bred for commercial exports.

The tiger, named Sheba, roamed the countryside outside of Johannesburg for days, attacking a man and killing several animals, said Mandy.

The 39-year-old man survived the assault and was hospitalised with injuries to his legs, according to local media.

Dozens of people, including animal experts and members of the community group tracked the big cat using drones and a helicopter.

The decision to put her down was made after her latest kill.

"She killed the dog in a private farm with dwellings where six families reside, it was becoming too much of a risk," Mandy said.

"In that moment there was no other option but to put her down," said Mandy.

Tiger farming in South Africa was spawned by the legal breeding of lions for commercial hunting. Lion bone exports towards Asia were also legal until 2019 when a moratium was put in place following a court ruling.

Animal rights groups are livid at the growing trend to breed big cats.

"It's absolutely disgusting what is going on here," Smaragda Louw, director of non-profit organisation, Ban Animal Trading told AFP. "Keeping a tiger as a pet is simply animal cruelty."

- Black market -

A report by the global animal rights charity Four Paws showed that 452 live tigers and tiger parts were exported from South Africa from 2011-2020, mostly to zoos.

It cited among top buyers of live tigers, Vietnam, China and Thailand where there is "high demand for tiger parts used in traditional medicine and luxury items."

Globally, the captive population of the endangered big cat is three times the remaining wild population.

"We've been advocating to South African authorities to bring an end to tiger farming because if (people) don't have access to buying these animals this wouldn't have happened," Four Paws spokeswoman Elize Parker told AFP, referring to the Sheba incident.

Environment ministry spokesman Albi Modise said a team was set up in late 2022 year to look into a possible ban on tiger breeding and is expected to start its work this year.

South Africa has no official count of its tiger population.

Louw said that a report last year found that tiger bones were found among lion bones that had been exported in the past.

"So there's that black market as well," said Louw.

Rights groups also said farmers in South Africa were breeding ligers -- a cross between tigers and lions.

But Louw said these creations brought no "conservation value because they can never be introduced to the wild."

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)