Cincinnati – Ohio Zoo Defends Shooting Of Gorilla After Boy Fell In Enclosure

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    Kate Villanueva of Erlanger, Kentucky, center right, holds a sign depicting the gorilla Harambe during a vigil outside the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden, Monday, May 30, 2016, in Cincinnati. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)Cincinnati – The director of the Cincinnati Zoo on Monday stood by the decision to shoot dead a gorilla as he dragged a 4-year-old boy around by the ankle, saying the ape was not simply endangering the child who fell into his enclosure but actually hurting him.

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    “Looking back, we would make the same decision” to shoot the gorilla, Thayne Maynard, director of the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Gardens, told a news conference.

    Maynard says the western lowland gorilla was extreme strong and could crush a coconut in its hand.

    “The gorilla was clearly agitated. The gorilla was clearly disoriented,” Maynard said, while lamenting the loss of Harambe, a 17-year-old Western lowland gorilla, whose species is listed as endangered.

    The boy’s head was banging on the concrete as he was being dragged through the enclosure, which was one factor in the decision to shoot Harambe on Saturday.

    Shooting the ape with a tranquilizer dart would have further agitated him and further endangered the child, so zookeepers made the decision to shoot Harambe. The zoo’s dangerous animal response team shot Harambe dead about 10 minutes after he encountered the child.

    Animal lovers mobilized on Monday as outrage mounted over the killing.

    More than 200,000 people had signed online petitions on Change.org to protest the shooting. Some petitions urged police to hold the child’s parents accountable.

    However, Maynard said the zoo had also received thousands of messages of sympathy and support, including from other zoos.

    Maynard maintained that the exhibit was safe and the zoo was not negligent. The boy apparently climbed over a 3-foot (one-meter) barrier, he said.

    “People can climb over barriers. That’s what happened,” he said.

    “The barrier’s adequate,” Maynard said.

    The zoo would review the barrier to see if it could be improved, he said.

    A witness reports hearing the boy tell his mother he wanted to get in the water Saturday afternoon. She said no, but the boy entered a moat in the gorilla exhibit anyway.


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    11 Comments
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    7 years ago

    I think we should bring all these people to Israel to protest the senseless death of Israelis

    mendoza
    mendoza
    7 years ago

    when there child will be draged by a beast , then we will hear what they have to say . in till then they can shut up

    Oyvey
    Oyvey
    7 years ago

    If people can vote for Sandrs, Hillary, or Trump, they definitely can vote in favor of the gorilla.

    bennyt
    bennyt
    7 years ago

    Thousands of innocent men. women and children are murdered every day around the world all in the name of religion and you don’t hear a peep from these morons protesting the killing of a primate who might have harmed or killed a young child. When I see this, I start to undrstand why Darwin promoted the belief that mankind from apes.