begin quote from:
New York Daily News | - 39 minutes ago |
Onlookers
gasp, anxious about the child's condition and fearful how the gorillas
will react to the unexpected visitor. Saturday's incident at the
Cincinnati Zoo - which ended with a gorilla named Harambe shot dead in
order to rescue a toddler - has ...
Ohio zoo closes gorilla exhibit for now after boy, 4, falls in
A young child falls into a zoo's gorilla enclosure.
Onlookers gasp, anxious about the child's condition and fearful how the gorillas will react to the unexpected visitor.
Saturday's incident at the Cincinnati Zoo — which ended with a gorilla named Harambe shot dead in order to rescue a toddler — has drawn new attention to previous encounters between gorillas and humans.
In 1986, Levan Merritt fell into the gorilla pit at Jersey Zoo in the U.K.
Caretaker mourns death of gorilla killed at Cincinnati Zoo
As the 5-year-old lay bleeding after losing consciousness, Jambo — a male silverback gorilla — watched over the boy, guarding against other gorillas in the enclosure.
Jambo ran away after Merritt gained consciousness and started to cry. Responders later jumped into the pit to rescue the boy.
Ten years later, in 1996, an unidentified boy climbed over a railing and fell into the enclosure at Brookfield Zoo in Chicago.
Binti Jua cradled the toddler in her arms and carried the boy to the zoo's service door, where keepers aided the injured boy.
Experts at the time called the child's predicament "extremely dangerous."
Toddler falls into gorilla cage at Cincinnati Zoo
"You can never predict how the animals will react to a human in their
enclosure. The child had fallen into the ape's territory," exhibit
curator Melinda Pruett-Jones said following the 1996 encounter.
Harambe, the gorilla killed in Saturday's incident, showed similar concern following the boy's 12-foot fall, grabbing the child and carrying him into a moat.
But zoo officials worried for the boy's safety, with Cincinnati Zoo President Thane Maynard calling the situation "life-threatening," and experts fearful that tranquilizers would have taken too long to take effect.
"They made a tough choice and they made the right choice. Because they saved that little boy's life. It could have been very bad," Maynard said.
Animal expert Jack Hanna echoed similar sentiments.
"I've seen him take a green coconut, which you can't bust open with a sledgehammer and squish it like this," Hanna said about Harambe Monday on "Good Morning America." "You're dealing with either human life or animal life here. So what is the decision? I think it's very simple to figure that out."
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Before Harambe's death at Cincinnati Zoo, gorillas have shown compassion for young children who fell into zoo enclosures
Onlookers gasp, anxious about the child's condition and fearful how the gorillas will react to the unexpected visitor.
Saturday's incident at the Cincinnati Zoo — which ended with a gorilla named Harambe shot dead in order to rescue a toddler — has drawn new attention to previous encounters between gorillas and humans.
In 1986, Levan Merritt fell into the gorilla pit at Jersey Zoo in the U.K.
Caretaker mourns death of gorilla killed at Cincinnati Zoo
As the 5-year-old lay bleeding after losing consciousness, Jambo — a male silverback gorilla — watched over the boy, guarding against other gorillas in the enclosure.
Ten years later, in 1996, an unidentified boy climbed over a railing and fell into the enclosure at Brookfield Zoo in Chicago.
Binti Jua cradled the toddler in her arms and carried the boy to the zoo's service door, where keepers aided the injured boy.
Experts at the time called the child's predicament "extremely dangerous."
Toddler falls into gorilla cage at Cincinnati Zoo
Harambe, the gorilla killed in Saturday's incident, showed similar concern following the boy's 12-foot fall, grabbing the child and carrying him into a moat.
But zoo officials worried for the boy's safety, with Cincinnati Zoo President Thane Maynard calling the situation "life-threatening," and experts fearful that tranquilizers would have taken too long to take effect.
"They made a tough choice and they made the right choice. Because they saved that little boy's life. It could have been very bad," Maynard said.
"I've seen him take a green coconut, which you can't bust open with a sledgehammer and squish it like this," Hanna said about Harambe Monday on "Good Morning America." "You're dealing with either human life or animal life here. So what is the decision? I think it's very simple to figure that out."
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