This Article is From Sep 23, 2014

White Tiger Kills Man Who Fell Into Its Enclosure At Delhi Zoo

White Tiger Kills Man Who Fell Into Its Enclosure At Delhi Zoo

The white tiger killed this man at the Delhi zoo

New Delhi: A white tiger attacked and killed a 20-year-old man who apparently slipped and fell into its enclosure at the Delhi zoo on Tuesday.

Witnesses claim the man, identified as Maksood, slipped and fell 18 feet into a dry moat in the tiger enclosure. Moments later, the fully-grown tiger could be seen mauling him.

It is not clear how Maksood fell; some say he was sitting on the enclosure, others say the barricade was too low and he fell in. An image taken by witnesses shows him cowering before the giant animal, his hands folded.

Authorities eventually frightened the tiger into a small cage inside the enclosure. The body remained at the spot two hours after the attack, said AP.

A witness said he raced to the tiger enclosure after hearing screams, to see the man locked in the tiger's jaws, "writhing badly in pain".


"We saw some kids throwing in small sticks and stones inside the tiger enclosure. Then we saw that a white tiger had gripped a man by his neck. No one helped him," said Himanshu, a visitor.

Witnesses say the man suffered for an agonizing 10-15 minutes before dying. But security guards were allegedly not equipped to save the man; witnesses claim they didn't have tranquilizer guns or radio sets to call in reinforcements.

"The tiger didn't attack at first, till stones were thrown at it. I saw the man folding his hands before the tiger, who kept looking at first. The man tried to run away but the tiger swiped at him, wounding his neck. Then it carried him away by the head," said Bittu, a witness who  filmed the horrific incident on his mobile phone.

Another witness said security guards spent more time trying to shoo people away from the enclosure, instead of trying to help the man.

White tigers are found in southern and eastern Asia, particularly India, and owe their appearance to a recessive gene. They are regarded as an endangered species.
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