Home>News Center>China
       
 

Search team fails to capture tigers at large
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2005-06-26 16:38

After half a month's hunt, representatives of a 1,000-strong search team on Saturday said they failed to catch two tigers confirmed to be roaming in a famous tourist sight in Shandong Province.


Local armed police search the Tai Mountain on June 11 upon the report that a adult tiger and a tiger cub were spotted there. [baidu]

"However, it is almost impossible for the tigers to be still in the Mount Tai," Sun Haiyi, an official and animal expert with State Bureau of Forestry, said at a press conference held at the foot of the famous tourist spot in eastern province of Shandong.

Villagers in Mount Tai first spotted an adult and a cub tigers in the mountainous Donglu area on June 9. Days later city officials confirmed the finding and assigned a 1,000-strong search team, composed by armed police and the paramilitaries, to the mountains.

The hunt was carried out around the clock for more than ten days. "The tigers must have gone," Sun said, because no food or tamed animals were reported missing in the nearby villages while wild animals rarely live in Mount Tai.

"Otherwise the tigers should have been dead for starving in a hidden place that is out of our search coverage," he said.

Tigers exist in the wild in China but not in Shandong province.And no zoos in Shandong reported tiger missing in these days. Experts believed these cats roaming in Mount Tai escaped from the zoos outside Shandong or from the tiger-transport trucks that ran past the province.

Large part of the search team will be dismissed soon, while some of them will continue the search, the city official announcedat the press conference.

And the roped-off tourist sight is allowed to open to visitors from Saturday, they said



Special police detachment established in Xi'an
Panda cubs doing well in Wolong
Suspect arrested in Taiwan
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

Taiwan's KMT Party to elect new leader Saturday

 

   
 

'No trouble brewing,' beer industry insists

 

   
 

Critics see security threat in Unocal bid

 

   
 

DPRK: Nuke-free peninsula our goal

 

   
 

Workplace death toll set to soar in China

 

   
 

No foreign controlling stakes in steel firms

 

   
  No foreign controlling stakes in steel firms
   
  China-made telescopes race to space
   
  'No trouble brewing,' beer industry insists
   
  HK investors cautious on mainland homes
   
  Law in pipeline to ban money laundering
   
  Overseas students test their Chinese abilities
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Big cats still at large two weeks on
  News Talk  
  It is time to prepare for Beijing - 2008  
Advertisement