The Borneo Post (Sabah)

New tiger goes on the loose in Johannesbu­rg

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JOHANNESBU­RG: A tiger escaped from a private property in Johannesbu­rg on Monday, just weeks after another went on the loose near the city, reigniting calls for stricter regulation­s on keeping wild animals.

A private security firm in the northeaste­rn suburb of Edenvale said the runaway animal was recaptured hours after it was spotted roaming the area.

It was not immediatel­y clear who the big cat belonged to and exactly where it had escaped from.

Security cameras footage circulatin­g on social media showed the tiger – believed to be a nine-month-old female – roaming around a parked car in what appeared to be the backyard of a house in the early hours of the morning.

Earlier this month, another tiger had escaped from an exotic farm near Johannesbu­rg.

That animal, a female Bengal tiger named Sheba, roamed the countrysid­e for four days, attacking a man and killing several animals before it was euthanised.

Tigers are not native to South Africa but there are no laws banning owning them as pets.

Rearing the big cats has become a flourishin­g industry in the country, where they are kept as pets or bred for commercial export. Smaragda Louw, director of non-profit organisati­on Ban Animal Trading, said the new incident showed it was too easy to own wild animals and stricter rules were needed.

“What we need to look at are the laws. We know that they are completely outdated,” she told AFP.

Tshepo Mokalapa, an inspector with the National Council of Societies for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (NSPCA), said the organisati­on was “opposed to keeping wildlife as pets, especially big cats like tigers”.

Animal rights groups are deeply concerned by the growing trend in breeding big cats in South Africa.

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