German tourist killed by wild elephant in India

(FILES) Elephants and their calves enter the in Loango Park on March 15, 2022. – In heavily forested Gabon, elephants are increasingly wandering into villages and destroying crops, angering the local population who demand the power to stop the critically endangered animals in their tracks.
Villagers across the central African country live in fear of close encounters with elephants, whether on the road, going to wash in the river or especially in fields where they grow their crops.
Strict conservation policies have made Gabon “the refuge of forest elephants”, Lea-Larissa Moukagni, who heads the human-wildlife conflict programme at the National Agency of National Parks (ANPN) said. (Photo by Steeve JORDAN / AFP)

A German tourist died in India after he was attacked by a wild elephant in a forest reserve, police said Wednesday.

The 77-year-old was riding a hired scooter in Tiger Valley in southern Tamil Nadu state on Tuesday evening when the agitated elephant attacked him on a hilly forest road, tossing the tourist into the woods.

“He failed to understand warnings by other travellers who had stopped a safe distance after spotting the wild elephant and drove ahead,” said Uma, a police officer who uses only one name.

“The elephant attacked him and he died on the way to a local hospital,” the officer told AFP.

Police said they had tried contacting the dead man’s family “but no one responded to our calls”.

Local media reported that the tourist continued driving towards the wild elephant despite warnings by travellers who were waiting for the animal pass — and honked loudly to drive it away.

His decision to “ignore warnings and attempt to cross the road despite the elephant’s presence led to the fatal accident,” forest officer G. Venkatesh said, according to the New Indian Express newspaper.

India has an estimated 30,000 wild Asian elephants.

In India, elephants attack locals regularly — and vice versa — as humans encroach into forest areas.

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