The killing of a gorilla at the Cincinnati Zoo after a four-year-old boy got into the animal’s enclosure triggered outrage and questions about safety, but zoo officials called the decision to use lethal force a tough but necessary choice.
More than 2000 people have signed a petition on Change.org that sharply criticizes the Cincinnati Police Department and the zoo for putting down the animal and called for the child’s parents to be “held accountable for their actions of not supervising their child”.
Cincinnati police on Sunday said the parents had not been charged, but that charges could eventually be sought by the Hamilton County Prosecuting Attorney.
A spokeswoman for the prosecutor did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A Facebook page titled “Justice for Harambe” had more than 3000 likes by Sunday afternoon, a day after the 180-kilogram gorilla was shot dead about 10 minutes after encountering the child.
The animal, named Harambe, was a western lowland gorilla, an endangered species, and the zoo said it had intended to use him for breeding.
Witnesses told local television that the boy repeatedly expressed a desire to join the gorilla in the zoo habitat.
Moments later, the boy crawled through a barrier and fell about 3.7 metres into a moat surrounding the habitat, where Harambe found him, zoo officials said.
It was the first time in the 38-year history of the zoo’s gorilla exhibit that an unauthorised person was able to get into the enclosure, zoo president Thane Maynard said on Saturday.
“They made a tough choice and they made the right choice because they saved that little boy’s life,” he said, adding that a member of the zoo’s Dangerous Animal Response Team fired the shot that killed the ape.
Mr Maynard said the team decided to use deadly force instead of tranquilisers to subdue the gorilla because it could have taken some time for the drug to take effect when an animal was in agitated state.
The child was taken to Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Centre for treatment of non-life threatening injuries. Hospital officials, citing privacy laws, declined to say on Sunday whether the child had been released or to disclose any details about his injuries.
Western lowland gorilla numbers in the dense rain forests of Cameroon, the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Equatorial Guinea have declined by more than 60 per cent over the past 20 to 25 years, according to the World Wildlife Federation.
The Cincinnati Zoo was open on Sunday, although Gorilla World was expected to be closed indefinitely. Neither the zoo nor the fire department responded to a request for comment.
At other US zoos, similar encounters have ended in tragedy, including the 2013 fatal mauling of a two-year-old boy by a pack of wild African dogs after he fell into an exhibit at the Pittsburgh Zoo and PPG Aquarium.
A man who in 2012 jumped into an enclosure at New York’s Bronx Zoo to be “one with the tiger” suffered bite wounds and other injuries but survived.
But there was a happy ending when a three-year-old boy fell into the gorilla den at Brookfield Zoo near Chicago in 1996, and an eight-year-old female gorilla named Binti Jua picked up the unconscious boy and protected him from the other primates.
The act of kindness won Binti Jua national attention as Newsweek’s Hero of the Year and one of People’s most intriguing people.
Source: The Sydney Morning Herald