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WILDLIFE

Search for Berlin ‘lioness’ ends as mayor claims it was likely a boar

The hunt for a wild animal, initially believed to be a lioness roaming the outskirts of Berlin, ended on Friday with officials suggesting the sighting was more likely a boar.

Hunters and police officers search for a lioness in the forests
Hunters and police officers search for a lioness in the forests near Berlin. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Fabian Sommer

“Everything indicates it is not a lioness,” Michael Grubert, the mayor of the town of Kleinmachnow outside the capital, told a press conference.

The animal thought to be the lioness in the original amateur video was “with relative certainty” a boar.

In a story that fascinated Germany and livened up the summer “silly season”, two people spotted what appeared to be a lioness early Thursday chasing a wild boar down a street outside the capital and made a short, grainy video.

But their account and a sighting by police officers were the only evidence of the wild animal, more at home on the African savanna than the sandy soils of eastern Germany.

Police continued combing the streets of suburban communities southwest of Berlin in the small hours of Friday using night-vision goggles and drones but called off a forest search until daybreak, a spokesman said.

The mayor of the town of Kleinmachnow, Michael Grubert, told public broadcaster RBB that professional animal trackers searching for dung or bloody remains of prey had been enlisted alongside police, veterinarians and hunters.

READ ALSO: ‘Lioness’ reported on the loose around Berlin

But he acknowledged that the massive operation involving over 100 police officers as well as helicopters and thermal-imaging cameras was stretching his community’s resources.

“This can’t go on for days,” he said.

Once the animal is found, it will likely be sedated with a tranquiliser and taken to an animal shelter, Grubert said.

A reporter for RBB said that the 32 registered lions in Brandenburg state surrounding Berlin were accounted for, leaving police to ask whether the beast had been kept illegally. No owner has come forward since the search began early Thursday.

Archive photo of a lioness. Photo: Dyrenes Beskyttelse press release

‘Into thin air’

Despite numerous tips from citizens, including a few claiming to have heard a loud roar, none of the information had led to the animal being located so far, police said.

Residents in the area have been advised “to act with appropriate caution and to avoid the adjacent forests” and to keep pets and farm animals in safety.

Anyone crossing paths with the big cat should “seek safety immediately and call the police”, Brandenburg police said.

Despite the reported sightings by the passers-by and police, wild animal expert Derk Ehlert voiced doubt it was actually a lioness on the loose due to the absence of any trace of the beast since early Thursday.

“A lioness doesn’t just disappear into thin air,” he told public radio. It’s not the first time Germans have been told to be on the lookout for wild animals.

In May, residents in the central German city of Erfurt were jolted by the sight of a kangaroo hopping across a busy road after escaping from a private property.

In 2019, it took several days for a deadly cobra to be recaptured in the western town of Herne, where residents had been told to keep their windows closed and steer clear of tall grass.

In 2016, German zookeepers shot dead a lion after it escaped from its enclosure in the eastern city of Leipzig and a tranquiliser failed to stop it.

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BREAKING

LATEST: Four killed in Flixbus accident on German motorway

Four people were killed and around 35 injured when a bus overturned on a German motorway near Leipzig on Wednesday, police said.

LATEST: Four killed in Flixbus accident on German motorway

The bus came off the A9 motorway in the morning between Wiedemar and the Schkeuditzer Kreuz junction.

Police had earlier announced the death of five people in the accident, but revised the toll in the evening. One person initially reported dead is in a critical condition, police said in a press statement Wednesday evening.

They said 29 passengers were slightly injured and six were in serious condition.

Emergency services attended to the injured at the scene and the motorway was closed in both directions, German authorities said. The A9 motorway is an important north-south route between Berlin and Munich.

The bus, which belonged to German travel company Flixbus, was on its way from Berlin to Zurich. There were 52 passengers and two drivers on board, the budget operator said.

“The exact circumstances of the accident are not yet known,” Flixbus said in a statement.

“We are of course working closely with the local authorities and the emergency services on site and will do everything in our power to clarify the cause of the accident quickly and completely,” it said.

The two drivers both survived, Flixbus added.

Photos showed the bus on its side, having apparently ploughed into trees on the side of the road.

There were no indications that any other vehicles were involved in the crash, according to the police.

In recent years, there have been a number of serious coach accidents. Nevertheless, buses are one of the safest means of transport comparatively. According to accident statistics, they are rarely involved in traffic accidents resulting in personal injury.

Flixbus, which runs long distance domestic and international bus services through Germany, has previously been involved in several fatal traffic accidents. 

Last fall, one passenger died and 20 were injured when a bus overturned in Austria. 

Another Flixbus crashed on the same stretch of motorway in May 2019. In that accident involving a bus travelling from Berlin to Munich, one person was killed and more than 60 injured, seven of them seriously.

READ ALSO: One dead and dozens injured after Flixbus overturns near Leipzig

Emergency response efforts

The bus was righted at noon with the help of harnesses, allowing emergency response persons to be able to rescue further occupants. The event was fenced off by mobile privacy screens.

Hospitals in the area prepared for a large-scale operation. The emergency room is alerted and operating rooms and diagnostic rooms are being prepared and maintained, a spokesman for the Deaconess Hospital in Leipzig told DPA.

In addition, the control centre has been informed of the capacities available for the admission of patients.

Saxony’s Transport Minister Martin Dulig expressed dismay: “My thoughts are with the relatives of the victims and injured. I would like to thank the many emergency services on site who provide quick assistance.”

German Transport Minister Volker Wissing said he was “shocked” by the accident. “Our thoughts are with the families of the victims and, of course, with all those affected, and we wish the injured a speedy recovery,” he told Welt TV.

With reporting by DPA.

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