A Thursday
encounter left a man injured and a bear dead on Svalbard. Authorities have been
warning eclipse-chasing visitors about the dangers posed by the Arctic
archipelago's 3,000 polar bears.
Deutsche Welle, 19 March 2015
A Czech
tourist received injuries to his face and arm on Thursday when a polar bear
attacked him on the remote island of Svalbard in the Arctic Ocean. The
37-year-old man was flown by helicopter to a hospital with non-life threatening
injuries.
The bear
was immediately shot dead following the attack.
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| A solar eclipse will be visible at 1011 UTC Friday across northern Europe. |
The
incident came on the eve of a total solar eclipse that will only be fully
visible in far northern latitudes. Hotels in the region have long been sold out
by visitors eager to get a glimpse of the rare event.
Authorities
routinely warn visitors of the dangers posed by the archipelago's 3,000 polar
bears which outnumber their 2,500 human neighbors.
"It is
an ever-present danger," said Ronny Brunvoll, head of the Visit Svalbard
organization. "Security is number one, two and three."
Outdoor
enthusiast Jakub Moravec had been part of a group of six campers on a
snowmobile and ski tour some 50 kilometers (30 miles) from the main settlement
of Longyearbyen in the Norwegian-administered archipelago of Svalbard.
The campers
said they had strung a tripwire around the camp’s perimeter but the bear had
slipped underneath.
Moravec
told Norwegian broadcaster NRK that he woke up in his tent with a bear standing
over him.
"My
colleague used a gun, a revolver, and shot the polar bear," he said.
The polar
bear then fled the shots. Officers from the governor’s office arrived by
helicopter and killed the bear about 200 meters from the tents.
The most
recent fatal encounter was in August 2011, when a 17-year-old British schoolboy
was killed by a hungry polar bear during a school trip.
jar/lw (AFP, Reuters, dpa)


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