
Lion's owners arrested after woman and children injured in attack in Pakistan
The arrest came after dramatic video footage emerged showing the lion leaping over a wall before attacking the victims in a residential area.
Faisal Kamran, a police official, said the woman and her five- and seven-year-old children sustained injuries to their faces and arms on Wednesday night when the lion escaped from its cage.
According to a police report, the children's father said the lion's owners had stood by and watched as the animal clawed at his family, making no effort to restrain it. The lion later returned to the owners' farmhouse and was relocated to a wildlife park, police said.
Keeping exotic animals such as lions is considered a status symbol by some wealthy Pakistanis, despite the legal requirements and high fees associated with ownership.
In Turkey, a lion that escaped from a theme park near the resort of Antalya was shot dead on Sunday after attacking a man, the local governor and media reports said.
The lion, reportedly named Zeus, escaped his enclosure at the Land of Lions animal theme park in Manavgat, about 40 miles (65km) east of Antalya, in the early hours of the morning, the local governor said in a statement.
According to the BirGün newspaper, the lion attacked an agricultural worker called Suleiman Kir who was asleep in a pistachio field with his wife.
Kir tussled with the lion before it ran off. He was injured but not badly and was taken to a nearby hospital for treatment.
'We were covered with blankets to protect ourselves from mosquitoes and when the prayer call sounded, I tried to stand up but I couldn't,' he told the newspaper.
'Suddenly I felt something touch my left foot and when I eventually managed to get up, I saw it was something huge – I thought it was a dog.'
In a video posted online, he described the moments wrestling with the lion.
'We called for help but there was no one around. As the lion was biting my calf and my neck, I grabbed him around the neck and began to squeeze, and he backed off. At that moment, the security forces came,' he said.
'If I had not been strong, I wouldn't be here right now.'
Antalya's governor said in a statement that the lion had been tracked down and shot dead.
'It was not possible to catch the escaped lion alive because it posed a danger to people and the environment, so it was shot,' he said, indicating that an investigation had been opened into the incident.
BirGün said there were about 30 big cats at the Land of Lions.
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The Guardian
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Daily Mail
13 hours ago
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The Sun
16 hours ago
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Kpod sellers boast about the substance being undetectable in urine tests - giving buyers a false sense of safety that they won't face harsh punishments in Singapore. Operating on sites such as Telegram, dealers also encourage young people to risk buying them as etomidate is classified as a poison under Singapore's Poisons Act - and not as a controlled drug under the Misuse of Drugs Act. But authorities are set to change the rules. Shermaine was doing urine drug tests once a week, according to her dad, but the doctors never flagged any drugs in her system. When asked if he knew if his daughter had unknowingly consumed ketamine from her the vapes in the lead-up to her death, he said: "I just don't know." The Kpod crisis has also affected Delfard's friend, who admitted to him that he was using Kpods. 16 16 16 Describing his pal's zombie-like behaviour while using the vape, he said: "He just cannot stand well, and his leg is shaking." Delfard said he also witnessed another person "drop backwards" while smiling after using them. "Mostly teenagers are using these," he revealed, adding that Kpods were "a common thing now in Singapore". He said: "I think some parents still don't know what this Kpod thing is about. They just maybe think that for children it is normal [for them to be] vaping." But during government tests of 100 seized vapes, one in three Kpods were found to contain etomidate, Singapore's Health Minister said on July 20. Although the devices are usually used to deliver nicotine, the minister said they can be "a delivery device for a range of substances, from nicotine to psychoactive substances such as etomidate, to hardcore drugs that are illegal". Addressing the "invisible crisis", Delfard warned: "The government need to have help centres for teenagers. "But more of it is actually individual parents - they need to know about their children's life, they need to look into the roots of it." Delfard's advice to other parents is to show their children love - and to be involved in their lives. He continued: "At the end of day it's their parents - do they show love? Do they really care about their children? "Talk more about love with our children. Care about them. Look into their life. What's the root problem? Why are they taking this?" The grieving dad added: "For me... I neglected her. I wanted to prove to her by example that we don't need to go to vices in order to survive. "We don't need to take to take drugs to escape. But I'm a bit too late." As a former addict, Delfard knows the harsh reality. "I've been a drug addict before... I know how hard it is to come out of it," he said. "Once they get addicted, it's not like they don't want to come out of it." Delfard said he likes to remember Shermaine's big heart. "She had a strong sense of fairness; she would stand up for her friends, share her toys without hesitation, and notice if someone was feeling left out," he said. "I saw in her a mix of creativity, confidence, and kindness that made me believe she could inspire others." The Singaporean government has announced plans to list etomidate as a Class C drug following soaring reports of laced Kpods. 16 16