San Francisco Chronicle

Cruise guards defended in shooting of polar bear

- By Jan M. Olsen Jan M. Olsen is an Associated Press writer.

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Norwegian authoritie­s on Monday defended the actions of guards from a German cruise ship that killed a polar bear that had attacked and injured a crew member, saying they at first tried to scare it away.

Police spokesman Ole Jakob Malmo said two members of the 12-man crew that set foot on the most northern island of the Svalbard archipelag­o ahead of tourists on Saturday first tried to ward off the bear “by shouting and making loud noises as well as firing a signal pistol, but to no effect.”

A 42-year-old German man who was not identified sustained minor head injuries from the attack, Malmo said.

The incident sparked internatio­nal outrage, with animal rights activists saying it was wrong to begin with to let tourists from the MS Bremen cruise ship encroach upon territory known as a habitat for the vulnerable species.

The German cruise ship operator Hapag Lloyd Cruises said on its Facebook page that the landing on Svalbard was not “to serve the purpose of polar bear observatio­n, on the contrary: polar bears are only observed from aboard ships, from a safe distance.”

British comedian Ricky Gervais took to Twitter to call the tourists “morons,” while another user, Jane Roberts, said if such tourism was banned, guards “wouldn’t be needed to protect gawking tourists & polar bears would be left in peace & not shot dead merely to satisfy a photo op.”

The archipelag­o between mainland Norway and the North Pole is known for its stunning snow-covered mountains, fjords and glaciers, and is a popular cruise ship destinatio­n.

On its Web site, the office for the archipelag­o’s governor says bears may appear anywhere on Svalbard and urges people “to stay as far away as possible to avoid situations that could be dangerous for you and for the bear.”

 ?? Gustav Busch Arntsen / AFP / Getty Images ?? The polar bear was fatally shot on Spitsberge­n, an island in Norway’s Svalbard archipelag­o.
Gustav Busch Arntsen / AFP / Getty Images The polar bear was fatally shot on Spitsberge­n, an island in Norway’s Svalbard archipelag­o.

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