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Some Tbilisi zoo animals ‘may still be on the loose’

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Some animals from the flooded Tbilisi zoo might still be at large, zookeepers warned Thursday, after an escaped tiger mauled a man to death in the Georgian capital and had to be shot.

"Several animals may possibly be on the loose, but we need to complete a thorough inventory of dead and survived animals to know for sure," zoo spokeswoman Mzia Sharashidze told AFP.

The flash flood at the weekend tore through central districts of Tbilisi, wrecking the zoo and killing 19 people including three zoo workers.

Workers pull the body of a bear out of a building at a flooded zoo in the Georgian capital Tbilisi o...
Workers pull the body of a bear out of a building at a flooded zoo in the Georgian capital Tbilisi on June 15, 2015
Vano Shlamov, AFP/File

More than half of the zoo's 600 animals either drowned in the muddy waters or were later killed by police.

Lions, tigers, bears and a hippo were seen roaming the flooded streets in the wake of the disaster and were either shot dead or recaptured and returned to their enclosures.

On Wednesday, a white tiger that escaped from the zoo mauled a man to death in central Tbilisi before being shot dead by police.

Local residents push a hippopotamus along a flooded street in Tbilisi on June 14  2015
Local residents push a hippopotamus along a flooded street in Tbilisi on June 14, 2015
Beso Gulashvili, AFP

The tiger attack came just two days after Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili said all the animals which were swept from the zoo had been put down or captured.

He later apologised "for giving wrong information".

Animal rights activists have demanded an investigation into suggestions that some of the animals shot dead by police could have been spared.

Zoo's employees wash a penguin at a flooded zoo in the Georgian capital Tbilisi on June 16  201...
Zoo's employees wash a penguin at a flooded zoo in the Georgian capital Tbilisi on June 16, 2015
Vano Shlamov, AFP

Police said Wednesday they had searched a parking garage in a fashionable central neighbourhood after being told a second tiger was sighted there, but ultimately dismissed it as a false alarm.

Sharashidze said a team of zookeepers was sent Wednesday to the Georgia-Azerbaijan border to search for an African penguin spotted there by local residents, but was unable to find the bird.

She also said that a group of monkeys was seen overnight on Thursday in Tbilisi's central district.

Some animals from the flooded Tbilisi zoo might still be at large, zookeepers warned Thursday, after an escaped tiger mauled a man to death in the Georgian capital and had to be shot.

“Several animals may possibly be on the loose, but we need to complete a thorough inventory of dead and survived animals to know for sure,” zoo spokeswoman Mzia Sharashidze told AFP.

The flash flood at the weekend tore through central districts of Tbilisi, wrecking the zoo and killing 19 people including three zoo workers.

Workers pull the body of a bear out of a building at a flooded zoo in the Georgian capital Tbilisi o...

Workers pull the body of a bear out of a building at a flooded zoo in the Georgian capital Tbilisi on June 15, 2015
Vano Shlamov, AFP/File

More than half of the zoo’s 600 animals either drowned in the muddy waters or were later killed by police.

Lions, tigers, bears and a hippo were seen roaming the flooded streets in the wake of the disaster and were either shot dead or recaptured and returned to their enclosures.

On Wednesday, a white tiger that escaped from the zoo mauled a man to death in central Tbilisi before being shot dead by police.

Local residents push a hippopotamus along a flooded street in Tbilisi on June 14  2015

Local residents push a hippopotamus along a flooded street in Tbilisi on June 14, 2015
Beso Gulashvili, AFP

The tiger attack came just two days after Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili said all the animals which were swept from the zoo had been put down or captured.

He later apologised “for giving wrong information”.

Animal rights activists have demanded an investigation into suggestions that some of the animals shot dead by police could have been spared.

Zoo's employees wash a penguin at a flooded zoo in the Georgian capital Tbilisi on June 16  201...

Zoo's employees wash a penguin at a flooded zoo in the Georgian capital Tbilisi on June 16, 2015
Vano Shlamov, AFP

Police said Wednesday they had searched a parking garage in a fashionable central neighbourhood after being told a second tiger was sighted there, but ultimately dismissed it as a false alarm.

Sharashidze said a team of zookeepers was sent Wednesday to the Georgia-Azerbaijan border to search for an African penguin spotted there by local residents, but was unable to find the bird.

She also said that a group of monkeys was seen overnight on Thursday in Tbilisi’s central district.

AFP
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