The Borneo Post

Chinese hunt for escaped leopard dangles chickens as bait

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Residents in a Chinese city were warned to stay indoors as authoritie­s released flocks of chickens as bait to track down a leopard that escaped from a safari park, state media reported yesterday.

The leafy lakeside city of Hangzhou has been on edge since late last week, when residents began spotting leopards roaming around local hills covered in forest and tea plantation­s.

The leopard is one of three that escaped on April 19 – the other two have since been recaptured – a lapse that police said was concealed by the Hangzhou Safari Park’s management for nearly three weeks to avoid hurting its visitor numbers during a long holiday last week.

The incident has unleashed a torrent of Chinese internet posts savaging the park for endangerin­g the public, and lamenting the abysmal safety and animal-welfare record of the country’s chaotic zoos and wildlife parks.

Public outrage has also been fanned by footage of one of the big cats being mauled in a forest by a pack of fierce hunting dogs, and another showing one of the recaptured leopards with part of its hind foot missing.

The first leopard was quietly recaptured by the park on April 21, and the second last Friday by a far larger government search organised as news of the escapes went viral.

But the remaining feline has so far eluded the thousands of search personnel using tracker dogs, powered parachutes, and armed with drones and night-vision and heat-detection equipment.

Nearly 100 chickens were released to lure the cat, the Modern Express Post in the nearby city of Nanjing reported Tuesday.

Like the other two escapees, it was captive-born, lacks hunting smarts and is believed to be near starvation.

Authoritie­s also have posted additional security near the search zone and residents have been put on alert. —

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