![]() |
| The campsite near Longyearbyen where the polar bear attack took place |
A polar
bear has killed a Dutch man on Norway's Arctic Svalbard archipelago, local
officials said Friday, the sixth fatal attack in almost 50 years in the region.
According
to experts, the shrinking icecap has reduced the polar bears' preferred seal
hunting grounds, pushing them to approach populated areas in their search for
food.
The
incident took place overnight in a camping area near Svalbard's main town of
Longyearbyen, located 1,300 kilometres (800 miles) from the North Pole.
The
38-year-old victim was found seriously injured in his tent and died shortly
afterwards, the local governor's office said in a statement.
He had been
working at the campsite, according to the local Svalbardposte newspaper.
Other
people at the scene shot at the bear, which was later found dead in the parking
lot of the local airport.
In
Svalbard, which is also known as Spitzberg, people are advised to carry a
weapon when outside urban areas.
"The
bears generally stay away from humans. We are not at the top of their menu, as
they prefer to feed on seals," Jon Aars, a researcher at the Norwegian
Polar Institute, told AFP.
"But
they are also opportunistic animals, and if they are hungry and are desperate
enough, we can become their prey," he added.
![]() |
There are
an estimated 1,000 polar bears in the Svalbard archipelago
|
According
to a 2015 tally, the archipelago is home to about 1,000 polar bears, a
protected species since 1973.
Around 300
of them live year-round in the archipelago, with some concentrated in the west
of the territory near human settlements. The area was free of polar bears while
it was still legal to hunt them.
The
campsite worker's death was "a tragic event," Svalbard's deputy
governor Soelvi Elvedah said in a statement.
"But
this is also a strong reminder that we are in polar bear country and must take
the precautions to defend ourselves."
Five deadly
attacks on people had previously been recorded since 1971.
The most
recent previous fatality occurred in 2011 when a bear attacked a group of
British campers on a school trip.
A
17-year-old student was killed and four others were injured before the animal
was killed.
Last month
the Svalbard archipelago recorded its highest temperature for over 40 years,
21.2 degrees Celsius (70.2 Fahrenheit), almost equal to the all-time record,
Sweden's meteorological institute reported.
According
to scientific studies, global warming in the Arctic is happening twice as fast
as the rest of the planet.


No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.