Russia
Russian bears trap geology survey crew
Wednesday 23 July 2008
At least 30 hungry bears have trapped a group of geologists at their remote survey site in Russia's far east after killing two of their co-workers last week, emergency officials said on Tuesday.
Wednesday 23 July 2008
By AFPA team of geologists on Russia's seismically active
Kamchatka peninsula has refused to leave their camp after 30 bears
showed up, a press spokesman for the Kamchatka emergency
services ministry said.
"In the interests of safety they didn't come out to work --
the people are scared by the invasion of bears," the spokesman
said.
A bear killed two geologists at the worksite on July 18,
officials said.
Officials on Kamchatka, nine time zones east of Moscow on
the Pacific Ocean, said this year was remarkable for either too
many bears or not enough fish.
"Either way there is not enough food," the spokesman said.
Rampant fish poaching in the empty tundra of Russia's
farthest reaches sends hungry bear populations into populated
centres every year, attracted to the food-rich garbage humans
leave behind.
Officials said a helicopter ferrying officials and hunters
could not fly in bad weather, but an all-terrain vehicle was on
its way to the camp, where it would await government approval to
shoot the bears.
"It looks like a shoot by the hunters won't take place today
as there is still no permission. As soon as we get the document
from Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky the hunters can get to work," the
spokesman said.
As many as 16,000 native brown bears, cousins of the
American Grizzly, live on Kamchatka, an area twice the size of
Great Britain. An adult male can weigh 700 kilograms (1,500 lbs)
and stand 3 metres (10 feet) tall.
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