MSNB
January 7, 2008
Original
Article
Labeled 'problem animal'
after safari party-goers provoked it
An
elephant known as Tusker is seen last October
at a lodge in Kariba, Zimbabwe. The elephant
was put down Sunday after officials determined
he had become a problem animal.
HARARE, Zimbabwe - Tusker, a towering
50-year-old bull elephant that had become a favorite
for safari camp visitors, was shot dead after
New Year's party-goers provoked the animal into
trampling several cars, conservationists said
Monday.
Tusker was executed Sunday by rangers at the
Charara camp on the shores of Lake Kariba, 230
miles northwest of Harare, parks officials and
the independent Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force
said.
Rangers said that Tusker had become a danger
to people and was classified as a "problem
animal."
Johnny Rodrigues, head of the task
force, disagreed.
"Tusker was the resident Charara elephant
... he was a legend and a great favorite of tourists
and locals alike," he said.
The one-tusked elephant was a regular to the
Charara area, where he foraged for food in garbage
cans.
Rodrigues said that the elephant was provoked
into trashing cars by some of the hundreds of
young people at a New Year's party, and that
no one was hurt.
"Despite this senseless abuse, we have
had no reports of Tusker hurting anyone, which
is testament to his basic good nature," Rodrigues
said. "It is shocking these parties where
drugs and alcohol are abused should be permitted
in wildlife areas."
Music from powerful speakers at the party could
be heard for miles across the bush, he said.
Witnesses told The Associated Press the elephant
stomped on beer and soda bottles and attempted
to eat broken glass. They reported drunken party-goers
taunting the elephant by throwing bottles, lighting
fireworks, flashing car lights, hooting and even
plucking hairs from the animal's tail and slapping
its rump.
Rodrigues said an attempt to take the elephant
to another area was abandoned because veterinarians
said Tusker had an intestinal infection and was
unlikely to survive medications given to him
and the journey in a freight container. |