A male leopard that mauled six people at a school in India before it was captured has escaped its enclosure, officials said. The
eight-year-old leopard strayed into a closed school in Bangalore on 7
February, injuring several people before being tranquilised.
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The leopard was eventually tranquillised and moved to the park
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It was taken to Bannerghatta National Park for medical treatment but on Sunday broke out of its cage. But officials said there was no cause for public alarm. "It is a myth that a leopard can turn into a man-eater. It's a very
remote exception to the rule.
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Forest officials and local police launched an operation to capture the animal
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On this count, there is no need for
worry," Ravi Ralph, chief wildlife warden in the south Indian state of
Karnataka, told BBC Hindi's Imran Qureshi. However, as a
precautionary measure, forest officials have started visiting villages
located along the periphery of the park to advise people not to panic.
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A scientist and a forest employee were among those who were mauled by the animal
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Officials
said the leopard escaped when attendants opened the cage to feed it,
possibly when the cage door was not properly shut. "They say that
it could have got out through a gap in the railing. There is a lot of
incongruity in the statements made by the staff there.
So, we have
ordered an inquiry. We should know the details in the next two or three
days," Mr Ralph said. The escape came one week after the leopard broke into the school in the Kundalahalli area.
A scientist and a forestry employee were among those mauled as it was cornered close to a swimming pool.
It took forest and police officials 12 hours to capture the animal. A recent wildlife census estimates that India has a leopard population of between 12,000 and 14,000. Leopards
and other big cats have been known to stray into populated areas, and
conservationists have warned that such confrontations may increase as
humans encroach on animal habitats.
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