03 May 2007, 20:26
Jaco HumanLion attack diplomat
Africa
Lion handler fired after attack
2007-5-3 10:39
Harare - A lion handler at a game park near the Zimbabwean capital Harare has been fired and the park temporarily closed after a young Australian diplomat was severely mauled by lions.
The diplomat, who was on her first foreign posting, is lucky to be alive after the attack, the state-controlled Herald newspaper reported on Thursday.
Gemma Huggins, 27, was visiting the Lion and Cheetah Park when the incident happened on March 4, said the newspaper.
She and other embassy staff were taken into a lion pen by a handler when a lion suddenly pounced on her head and shook her, according to the report. Other lions then joined in the attack.
The lion's teeth are reported to have come within millimetres of Huggins' jugular vein.
Huggins has been treated for severe injuries to her head, neck, torso and leg and underwent several skin grafts at Pretoria's specialised Unitas Hospital.
Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade has confirmed that a diplomat from the Harare embassy had been hospitalised after an attack at a game park.
Second serious attack at park
This is the second serious lion attack at the Lion and Cheetah Park in recent years. In 2005, a Japanese diplomat was killed after she was attacked by lions at the park.
Officials at the game park say the handler on duty when Huggins was mauled has been fired.
"There is not much to say really because the woman attacked has since been released from hospital and we have already taken other corrective measures, which included dismissing the person who was on duty on that particular day," said Lion and Cheetah Park manager Anthony Newall.
The state Zimbabwe Tourism Authority (ZTA) ordered the temporary closure of the park after the attack.
Sapa-dpa
03 May 2007, 20:40
404WJJefferyI blame this on all those dumAss TV shows that depict lions, tigers and bears as our "friends", willing to play and cuddle.
Who in their right mind would enter a fenced enclosure with lions? Who would want to? So they can go home and tell how great it was to commune with nature? "I smelled his breath, and he looked at me, right into my eyes.....meanwhile the lion is thinking, "if I only had some Tobasco sauce, this one might go down a little easier..."
03 May 2007, 20:49
Steve MalinverniYeah,
something that make me to hope that the lion has a lot of appetite.
03 May 2007, 20:58
Safari-HuntQuestion is can they still afford to feed the lions or is that why they send in the diplomats ?

03 May 2007, 22:44
Michael RobinsonIt is nearly impossible to feel any compassion for these imbeciles.
Interesting that both "victims" were diplomats from first world countries.
Incidents like these are a reminder that the human gene pool does indeed have a shallow end.
03 May 2007, 22:51
Nickudu"The Lions are eating all the prophets!"
Darn...from the title of the post, I hoped it might be a story about someone fending off the lion (sorta like saying "nice doggie" while looking for a rock, to copy a tag).
06 May 2007, 03:04
rolexfanquote:
Originally posted by Safari-Hunt:
Question is can they still afford to feed the lions or is that why they send in the diplomats ?
"There are plenty of diplomats to go around"They are nothing but a parasite in the first place.
06 May 2007, 04:48
stuntpilot2I'd heard the Australian gov't had banned handguns. And, rifles. And, body armor.
Hadn't heard they'd banned brains.
quote:
Originally posted by 404WJJeffery:
I blame this on all those dumAss TV shows that depict lions, tigers and bears as our "friends", willing to play and cuddle.
Who in their right mind would enter a fenced enclosure with lions? Who would want to? So they can go home and tell how great it was to commune with nature? "I smelled his breath, and he looked at me, right into my eyes.....meanwhile the lion is thinking, "if I only had some Tobasco sauce, this one might go down a little easier..."
Saeed??
S