Zoo animals on the loose and deaths feared after Georgia floods
Tigers, lions, wolves and bears are feared to be still on the loose
in Georgia’s capital, amid chaotic scenes brought by devastating floods
that have reportedly killed 12 people.
Images of an escaped hippopotamus being cornered in one of Tbilisi’s
main squares after escaping from the city’s zoo have emerged, while
other animals have been killed or remain at large.
Heavy rainfall turned the Vere river – which flows through the
capital – into a torrent that swept away dozens of buildings and cars.
At least 12 people have been killed, according to news agencies, while
others are missing.
The army has been mobilised to help.
“The damage is substantial,” the prime minister, Irakli Garibashvili,
told reporters. He also called on residents to stay home as the search
for the animals continued.
Carcasses of wild animals that have been shot dead litter the streets
and tangled heaps of wreckage scar a large area around Tbilisi’s zoo
after Saturday night’s flash flood.
The zoo itself has been almost totally destroyed, says its director,
with most of its animals either drowned or shot after escaping. “It’s an
unbelievable tragedy,” said Zura Gurielidze as he surveyed his stricken
zoo park.
Three of his staff were among those reported dead in the disaster.
Among them was 56-year-old Guliko Chitadze, who was attacked by one of
the zoo’s tigers last month and lost an arm. She had just returned to
work, telling fellow staff she did not blame the tiger for what
happened. She lived in the zoo grounds with her husband, who died with
her.
The escaped hippo was cornered in one of the city’s main squares on
Sunday and subdued with a tranquilliser gun, the zoo said. Some other
animals also have been seized, but it remained unclear how many were
still on the loose.
People help move the hippopotamus to safety Photograph: Tinatin Kiguradze/AP
Police with rifles were still combing the tree-covered hills above
the zoo looking for the escaped animals as the remains of a hyena shot
dead lay in the nearby grounds of Tbilisi State University. It had
chased one of the staff, according to a police officer, who then locked
himself in a shed and called for help.
There are also reports of people using their hunting rifles to shoot
animals they see, and Gurielidze appealed for them not to, in case they
could be saved. There were no immediate reports that any of the other
fatalities were due to animal attacks.
Among the biggest tragedies for the zoo is the loss of a rare white
lion called Shumba. It had become one of the zoo’s biggest attractions
after they paired it with a dog to keep it company, after Shumba’s
mother stopped caring for him. They became friends and could be seen
playing and sleeping together right outside the zoo’s main offices.
Images on Tbilisi city hall’s Facebook page
showed roads submerged by floodwater and landslides with many vehicles
washed away, while rescue workers carried people on their shoulders
through waist-high water.
Such heavy rain is unusual for this time of year. But many say
uncontrolled development in the area made things worse, with the
drainage system overwhelmed. The zoo, situated at the bottom of a valley
in the city, was right in the target of line of the surge of water that
resulted.
The head of Georgia’s Orthodox church, Patriarch Ilia II, said the
flood was punishment for the zoo being built by the country’s former
communist rulers. “They ordered that all the crosses and bells in
churches be melted down and the money used to build the zoo,” he said.
“I am very sorry that Georgians fell so that a zoo was built at the
expense of destroyed churches.”
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