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| Polar bears are affected by global warming with melting Arctic ice forcing them to spend more time on land where they compete for food (AFP Photo/TORE MEEK) |
Moscow (AFP) - A Russian Arctic archipelago on Saturday declared an emergency situation over an "invasion" of dozens of aggressive polar bears that have entered homes and public buildings.
Russia's
northeastern Novaya Zemlya archipelago, which has a population of around 3,000
people, has appealed for help to tackle "a mass invasion of polar bears
into inhabited areas," regional authorities said in a statement.
Russian
authorities have so far refused permission to shoot the bears but are sending a
commission to investigate the situation and have not ruled out a cull.
Polar bears
are affected by global warming with melting Arctic ice forcing them to spend
more time on land where they compete for food.
They are
recognised as an endangered species in Russia and hunting them is banned.
Russia has
air force and air defence troops based on Novaya Zemlya.
Since
December, 52 polar bears have regularly visited the archipelago's main
settlement, Belushya Guba, with some displaying "aggressive
behaviour," local official Alexander Minayev said in a report to regional
authorities.
This
included "attacks on people and entering residential homes and public
buildings," said Minayev, the deputy chief of the local administration.
"There
are constantly 6 to 10 bears inside the settlement," he said.
"People
are scared, they are afraid to leave their homes... parents are frightened to
let their children go to schools and kindergartens."
The head of
the local administration Zhigansha Musin said that the numbers of polar bears
were unprecedented.
"I've
been on Novaya Zemlya since 1983 and there's never been such a mass invasion of
polar bears," he told regional officials.
Bears are
constantly inside a military garrison and "literally chase people" he
said as well as going into the entrances of blocks of flats.
Local
officials complained that measures to scare off polar bears such as vehicle and
dog patrols have not been effective as polar bears feel secure and no longer
react.
The federal
environmental resources agency has refused to issue licences to shoot the most
aggressive bears.
A working
group of regional and federal officials is set to visit the archipelago to
assess the situation and the measures taken so far.
The
Arkhangelsk regional authorities, which oversee Novaya Zemlya, said that if all
else failed "shooting the animals could be the only possible forced measure."
In January,
a defence ministry official said that hundreds of disused military buildings
had been demolished on Novaya Zemlya because polar bears were settling inside
them.
Russian officials say an "invasion" of aggressive polar bears in inhabited areas of Arctic Russia has come to an end, ten days after the animals came to the area looking for foodhttps://t.co/yrfiQV8NOG— AFP news agency (@AFP) February 19, 2019

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