Panic as lions on the loose in Kenyan capital
Wildlife rangers on Friday hunted for two lions who
escaped from Nairobi’s national park and meandered into “highly populated”
areas of the Kenyan capital. Kenya Wildlife Service issued an appeal, “for help
to get two lionesses that strayed from the Nairobi National Park.”
Armed rangers, as well as KWS vets with dart guns,
scoured bush and agricultural land alongside the Kibera district, one of
Africa’s largest slums. “Lions are dangerous wild animals. Avoid provoking
the lions by confronting them,” said KWS spokesman Paul Udoto.
At least two lionesses are reported to
have late Thursday left the park, spread over 117 square kilometres (45 square
miles) where buffalo and rhino roam just seven kilometres from the bustling
high-rise city centre.
Local media reported as many as six
lions might be on the loose.
It is not the first time lions have
prowled into town. The big cats are under growing pressure as one of Africa’s
fastest growing cities creeps onto ancient migration routes and hunting
grounds.
Sometimes the lions are killed by
livestock farmers protecting their herds, other times they prowl leafy gardens
giving residents a fright.
“These are highly populated areas and
that is why we are intensifying the search,” Udoto said. “Anyone with
information about them should share it with us immediately.”
Udoto said two lionesses were last
sighted around Nairobi’s Langata district.
“Our teams comprising veterinary
officials have been in Langata looking for the animals,” he said.
Rangers patrolled a narrow corridor of
bush on the edge of Kibera. Its tin-roofed shacks house an estimated quarter of
a million people, according to an aid agency that carried out a population
study there.
One fearful Nairobi resident tweeted KWS
spokesman Udoto asking whether she ought to “lock my kids in”.
“Yes, please do until we report lions
have been captured and safely returned to the park. Perils of born town lions,”
Udoto replied.
Lions are estimated to have declined in
number by as much as three-quarters since 1980, and to occupy less than a tenth
of their historic range across Africa.
While the park is fenced in on the city
side — some bars even have terraces where one can view animals while enjoying a
cold drink — the park is open-sided elsewhere to allow the annual wildlife
migration in search of grazing.
But the land is under threat from
increasing urbanisation and more intensive agriculture, and the routes used by
migrating herds in search of new pastures as well as the carnivores that follow
for fresh meat are growing narrower.
Conservationists say wildlife protection
is a low priority for city officials struggling with multiple challenges in a
grossly unequal capital of some 3.5 million people with overstretched basic
services and infrastructure.
In Nairobi, lavish villas adjoin squalid
slums and cramped high rise apartments.
AFP
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