Bangkok Post

Rare tiger shot dead after killing local man

-

KUALA LUMPUR: An indigenous Malaysian villager has been killed in a tiger attack, with government rangers shooting dead the critically endangered creature after it also charged them, authoritie­s said.

The 59-year-old victim, Anek Along, was attacked on Friday near the town of Gua Musang in the northern Malaysian state of Kelantan.

The 120-kilogramme creature then rushed to attack other villagers who threw spears to fend the creature off, wounding its face, according to wildlife officials.

Wildlife rangers arrived a few hours later and shot dead the tiger after it charged them.

Kelantan wildlife department director Mohamad Hafid Rohani told AFP authoritie­s were “sad” they were forced to kill the creature “as tigers [in Malaysia] are dying out”.

The Malayan tiger is classified as critically endangered by protection group the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN).

WWF Malaysia estimates there are fewer than 200 of the animals still left in the wild.

Attacks on humans by the tiger are rare, but such incidents have been known to occur in areas where developmen­ts encroach on the animals’ habitat.

In mid-July, rangers captured a female tiger near Gua Musang after it attacked and seriously injured a local.

Some 3,000 Malayan tigers once roamed the country’s jungles in the 1950s, and the big cat is regarded as Malaysia’s national animal.

However, its population have continued to decline over the decades due to a loss of habitat from developmen­t and agricultur­al expansion, as well as poaching.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand