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Lion shot dead at Leipzig zoo after escaping from enclosure Lion shot dead at Leipzig zoo after escaping from enclosure
(about 2 hours later)
One of two lions that escaped from an enclosure at a German zoo has been shot dead. German zookeepers have shot dead one of two lions that escaped from an enclosure after a tranquiliser failed to sedate it, the zoo’s director said.
Leipzig zoo said no one was injured in the incident after the lions escaped early on Thursday morning. “It’s a very, very sad outcome but we had no choice,” said the head of the zoo in the eastern city of Leipzig, Jörg Junhold.
One lion was successfully corralled back into its cage and the second was initially shot with a tranquilliser. The tranquilliser failed, zoo director Jörg Junhold told the dpa news agency, giving officials no option but to kill the lion. The one-year-old lions, named Majo and Motshegetsi, had slipped into the main grounds of the zoo at about 8.40am local time, before the park opened to the public.
“In this case the safety of people came first,” he said. Staff implemented an emergency plan, placing the facility on lockdown so the animals could not breach the facility’s fences.
The two male lions, Majo and Motshegetsi, were born about a year ago at Basel zoo and have been in Leipzig. since August. It was not clear which of the two lions was killed. “After Majo was caught and Motshegetsi was hit with a tranquiliser dart, we were hopeful that the breakout could end without any loss of life,” Junhold said.
However the staff then determined they had lost control of the situation and a zookeeper shot and killed Motshegetsi. “Human safety always comes first,” Junhold said.
The two lions, originally from Namibia, arrived in Leipzig last month from Basel zoo. They were given several weeks to get used to their new home before being released into an enclosure where they could be seen by the public.
The escape “surprised all of us because the enclosure had been in operation for 15 years. Of course we assume that it is secure,” Junhold said.
Last March, one tiger was killed by another at Leipzig zoo when a partition separating the animals was removed by accident.
An Ohio zoo faced international uproar in May when its staff killed a critically endangered gorilla as it dragged a young boy who had fallen into its enclosure.
While acknowledging the US zookeepers had few options, critics criticised the zoo, saying it should have installed more barriers. The park’s managers said its facility met all industry standards.