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Wednesday 10 April 2013

Photos: Wild leopard savages 15 people - including 3 policemen - after wandering into Kathmandu suburb


Fear: An armed policeman orders locals to flee for their lives as the cornered wild leopard bounds between houses in the suburb of Gothatar, Katmandu, Nepal, today

Fear: An armed policeman orders locals to flee for their lives as the cornered wild leopard bounds between houses in the suburb of Gothatar, Katmandu, Nepal, today

Marksmen have shot dead a leopard which seriously injured 15 people - including three police officers - after wandering into a suburb of Kathmandu.
A furious crowd dragged the mortally wounded animal through the streets of Gothatar on the outskirts of Kathmandu at around 6am today.
Graphic photographs capture residents fleeing for their lives as the leopard prowls between buildings.

Armed police from Metropolitan Police Circle, Koteshwor, were on the scene within minutes and managed to corner the animal, but not before it had mauled more than a dozen residents.
 
Upto three policemen and two officials from the Department of Forest were injured as they tried to trap the wild cat, according to local reports. 
Police said that all the injured were rushed to Mother Land Hospital, Pepsicola for the medical treatment.
An angry mob soon gathered around the animal, kicking and beating the feline as it lay on the dust.


Trapped: Locals stamp and beat the body of the leopard after it was mortally wounded by police
Trapped: Locals stamp and beat the body of the leopard after it was mortally wounded by police
Fury: Nepalese people vent their frustration after the leopard attack by stamping on the head of the dead animal in Gothatar, Katmandu, Nepal, today
Fury: Nepalese people vent their frustration after the leopard attack by stamping on the head of the dead animal in Gothatar, Katmandu, Nepal, today

Recently some calves were killed by a leopard in the jungle bordering Mrigasthali of the Pashupati area and the Tribhuvan International Airport.
Officials have been under increasing pressure to act to prevent wild cat attacks following a spate of maulings, some of which have been fatal.
The issue of deadly wild animal attacks is said to be particularly acute in so-called buffer zones where human settlements and national parks border one another.
In recent years, Nepal has developed a successful protection programme for many endangered species.
Conflict: This is the latest in a growing number of animal attacks on poeple as towns and villages increasingly infringe on the habitat of wildlife
Conflict: This is the latest in a growing number of animal attacks on poeple as towns and villages increasingly infringe on the habitat of wildlife
Shot dead: A crowd gathers around the dead leopard which had attacked 15 poeple, including three policemen, after wandering into a Kathmandu suburb today
Shot dead: A crowd gathers around the dead leopard which had attacked 15 poeple, including three policemen, after wandering into a Kathmandu suburb today
Attack: The crowd drag the dead leopard which had attacked upto 15 people, including three policemen, through the streets of Gothatar in Katmandu, Nepal, today
Attack: The crowd drag the dead leopard which had attacked upto 15 people, including three policemen, through the streets of Gothatar in Katmandu, Nepal, today

1 comment:

  1. these fuckn gook bastards ,there are too many Asians that is the problem,those colored assholes won't be happy till there isn't any wildlife at all,fuk this village,burn that dump down with all those worthless bug eaters in it.colored people are the scurge of the earth with their populations skyrocketing and pouring over into every white society,there will be no where for these nobel creatures to go.i hate Asians there are too fuckn many of the pricks killing and eating whatever moves.in this case they killed the animal in spite,these cats are scared that's why they attack with crowds of babbling gooks running around after the thing,i hope they all die of a wretched disease,like the disease their people are to the world.

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