Rotorua Daily Post

When monkeys attack

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People in a southweste­rn Japanese city have come under attack from monkeys that are trying to snatch babies, biting and clawing at flesh, and sneaking into nursery schools.

The attacks — on 58 people since July 8 — are getting so bad Yamaguchi city hall hired a special unit to hunt the animals with tranquiliz­er guns.

The monkeys aren’t interested in food, so traps haven’t worked. They have targeted mostly children and the elderly.

“They are so smart, and they tend to sneak up and attack from behind, often grabbing at your legs,” city official Masato Saito said.

When confronted by a monkey, the instructio­ns are: Do not look them in the eye, make yourself look as big as possible, such as by spreading open your coat, then back away as quietly as possible without making sudden moves, according to Saito.

A woman was assaulted by a monkey while hanging laundry on her veranda. Another victim showed bandaged toes. They were taken aback and frightened by how big and fat the monkeys were.

The monkeys terrorisin­g the community are Japanese macaque, the kind often pictured peacefully bathing in hot springs.

One male monkey, measuring 49cm in height and weighing 7kg, was caught on Wednesday by the team with the tranquiliz­er gun. It was judged by various evidence to be one of the attacking monkeys and put to death. But more attacks were reported after the capture.

No one has been seriously injured so far. But all have been advised to get hospital treatment. Ambulances were called in some cases.

No one seems to know why the attacks have occurred, and where exactly the troop of monkeys came from remains unclear.

“I have never seen anything like this my entire life,” Saito said. —AP

 ?? Photo / AP ?? A video shows a monkey looking into a home in Yamaguchi, Japan.
Photo / AP A video shows a monkey looking into a home in Yamaguchi, Japan.

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