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-   -   Uganda: Elephant kills 8 year old boy (https://www.thisisbigbrother.com/forums/showthread.php?t=343585)

Nicky91 19-07-2018 09:16 AM

Uganda: Elephant kills 8 year old boy
 
http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/Nation...eek/index.html

Residents of Latoro Trading Centre, Tegot parish in Got Apwoyo Sub County, Nwoya District have been left in grief after a marauding elephant killed an eight-year-old boy on Wednesday.
Local leaders say Griffin Ayoo, a pupil of Got Apwoyo Primary school was in the company of five other pupils going to school when he was attacked by the elephant.

The Murchison Falls conservation manager, Dr Eric Enyel confirmed the attack adding that the elephant wandered from the Park into community land on Tuesday night but became aggressive in the morning when angry locals tried to force it out of their gardens.
Dr Enyel said the wild animal while fleeing away, met the boy and grabbed him with its trunk before smashing his head on the Karuma-Pakwach tarmac road.
“Locals were chasing the elephant from a garden it invaded. They were shouting as others hurled stones at it. The elephant was already frightened and when it met the boy, it just attacked him and he died on spot,” Said Dr Enyel.

According to Dr Enyel, the incident wouldn’t have happened if the locals had used peaceful means to drive it out of their gardens or called for Uganda Wildlife Authority [UWA] rangers’ intervention.

He noted that although they are trying their best to dig trenches around the park to prevent wild animals from invading non protected areas, there is need for the locals to peacefully coexist with the animals.

Dr Enyel said they are already in talks with Ayoo’s family on how best UWA can contribute towards burial expenses.

The Nwoya LCV Chairperson, Mr Patrick Okello Oryema however blamed UWA management for their alleged failure to ensure that the national park is enclosed to limit movements of wild animals into community land.

He noted that over the past years, several plantations have been destroyed by marauding wild animals from the national park adding that it has discouraged many people from practicing agriculture.

“We demand that UWA officials explore alternative measures of managing the movement of wild animals because locals are becoming victims. The elephant-human conflict is bound to escalate if nothing is done,” Mr Oryema said.

Nicky91 19-07-2018 09:22 AM

a horrible accident i call this, i blame the locals for scaring the poor animal too much, making it run away and by an unfortunate coincidence he met that innocent child

Niamh. 19-07-2018 09:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nicky91 (Post 10096279)
a horrible accident i call this, i blame the locals for scaring the poor animal too much, making it run away and by an unfortunate coincidence he met that innocent child

I don't think there's any blame really in this one Nicky, the Elephant was scared but I'm sure the locals were too when they found him in their garden. Hopefully they'll get some education about how to best handle a situation like that in the future. Poor kid :(

Nicky91 19-07-2018 09:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Niamh. (Post 10096287)
I don't think there's any blame really in this one Nicky, the Elephant was scared but I'm sure the locals were too when they found him in their garden. Hopefully they'll get some education about how to best handle a situation like that in the future. Poor kid :(

fair enough


yes they need proper education for these sort of situations

Crimson Dynamo 19-07-2018 09:32 AM

"They were shouting as others hurled stones at it."

:/

Nicky91 19-07-2018 09:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LeatherTrumpet (Post 10096289)
"They were shouting as others hurled stones at it."

:/

yeah that is pretty dumb to go throwing stones at an elephant

arista 19-07-2018 09:38 AM

Yes the Poor Animal under stress
Someone is in charge
and must advise the locals better

Greg! 19-07-2018 09:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Livia (Post 10096294)
Heartbreaking, isn't it.

Africa is supposed to be the cradle of civilisation, isn't it?

So one tragic incident is representative of the whole continent? :umm2:

It's Europeans and Americans mostly who go out there to delibrately kill wild animals for fun

Livia 19-07-2018 09:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Greg! (Post 10096304)
So one tragic incident is representative of the whole continent? :umm2:

If only it were one incident, it wouldn't be representative, no. Sadly it's the latest in a long, long line of incidents. Have you heard elephants are endangered? It's been on the news and everything...

Niamh. 19-07-2018 09:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Greg! (Post 10096304)
So one tragic incident is representative of the whole continent? :umm2:

It's Europeans and Americans mostly who go out there to delibrately kill wild animals for fun

Yeah have to agree with that, obviously throwing stones isn't the best way to deal with it but elephants are big and can be aggressive, I don't think asking it to leave and gently leading it by the trunk is going to work too well either. Elephants are allowed to be scared and to panic. Which is exactly what the humans did too

Greg! 19-07-2018 09:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Livia (Post 10096305)
If only it were one incident, it wouldn't be representative, no. Sadly it's the latest in a long, long line of incidents. Have you heard elephants are endangered? It's been on the news and everything...

I'm very well aware they're endangered thanks. I've heard about lots of Europeans/Americans going over there and killing them for no reason. Twats but I don't think they represent their entire continent

Amy Jade 19-07-2018 10:03 AM

Meh

They shouldn't have thrown rocks at it, Elephants are not aggressive unless provoked.

Niamh. 19-07-2018 10:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Amy Jade (Post 10096322)
Meh

They shouldn't have thrown rocks at it, Elephants are not aggressive unless provoked.

Meh? Yeah the 8 year old deserved it :worry:

Kazanne 19-07-2018 10:14 AM

Poor kid,but how was the elephant allowed to 'walk out of the park' plus it only showed signs of aggression when the locals were throwing stones and shouting at it because it was in their gardens, the elephant felt threatened and did what animals do when they are scared. The adults should have known better.

Nicky91 19-07-2018 10:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Amy Jade (Post 10096322)
Meh

They shouldn't have thrown rocks at it, Elephants are not aggressive unless provoked.

agreed, i find Elephants so cute, one of my fave animals in the world honestly

Amy Jade 19-07-2018 10:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Niamh. (Post 10096324)
Meh? Yeah the 8 year old deserved it :worry:

I never said the child deserved it, nor would I ever but if the people around the animal had been less aggressive towards it then this would never have happened.

Niamh. 19-07-2018 10:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Amy Jade (Post 10096336)
I never said the child deserved it, nor would I ever but if the people around the animal had been less aggressive towards it then this would never have happened.

That's true but "meh" suggests you're not bothered by the fact that an innocent child was killed, he wasn't one of those throwing the stones either according to the article

Nicky91 19-07-2018 10:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Niamh. (Post 10096343)
That's true but "meh" suggests you're not bothered by the fact that an innocent child was killed, he wasn't one of those throwing the stones either according to the article

he wasn't involved in that, he only encountered the animal when it fled from the angry locals


so if they didn't throw the stones, it might've had a different ending

Crimson Dynamo 19-07-2018 10:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Niamh. (Post 10096343)
That's true but "meh" suggests you're not bothered by the fact that an innocent child was killed, he wasn't one of those throwing the stones either according to the article

another 42 children died that day in Uganda from malaria!

and again today and tomorrow

etc

Nicky91 19-07-2018 10:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LeatherTrumpet (Post 10096351)
another 42 children died that day in Uganda from malaria!

and again today and tomorrow

etc

that's something way different and offtopic from this story i think


and the answer to that problem, we need to give them medicine against malaria

Niamh. 19-07-2018 10:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LeatherTrumpet (Post 10096351)
another 42 children died that day in Uganda from malaria!

and again today and tomorrow

etc

so this death isn't tragic?

Cherie 19-07-2018 10:57 AM

Is that really you, I had you pegged as younger

Poor lad
Poor elephant

Niamh. 19-07-2018 11:18 AM

Anyway RIP to that poor child, someones son.

smudgie 19-07-2018 11:22 AM

Poor kid. R.I.P. :sad:

Niamh. 19-07-2018 11:40 AM

Closed for cleaning, so disrespectful to a CHILD who died here


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