Brown bear drags hiker into Japanese forest

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epa03903631 A picture made available on 09 October 2013 shows a young brown bear hunting a salmon running on a river in Shiretoko on Japan's northeastern island of Hokkaido, 02 October 2013 in preparation for hibernation in winter. Shiretoko, located on Shiretoko Peninsula, is called as last rarely-visited regions. Most of the area on the peninusla is defined as Shiretoko National Park, where is known as the home of Japan's brown bear, and defined as World Natural Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2005. Shiretoko means end of the Earth in Ainu language. Ainu is indigenous people on Japanese northern island of Hokkaido and worship brown bear as kimunkamuy, god in mountains in Ainu. Hokkaido Government office announced in June 2013 estimated population of brown bear in Hokkaido was around 2244-6476 in 2012 due to questionary investigation to 5,800 hunters. More than half of them inhabit in Soya and east of Hokkaido including Shiretoko, Hokkaido Goverment office said in the report. The population of the bear is almost twice than the previous questionary survey in 2000 but the figures are very rough due to difficulty of real investigation. The local government has announced in mid-September 2013 the haunting of brown bears will increasse this autumn due to bad growth of acorns and oak as food to take for the hibernation.  EPA/KIMIMASA MAYAMA

The hiker in his 20s had apparently tried to fight off a bear but was pulled into nearby woods with his legs bleeding profusely.

PHOTO: EPA

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Tokyo - A wild brown bear dragged a young hiker into a forest in northern Japan, media and police said on Aug 15, with the victim missing a day after the bloody attack.

The hiker in his 20s tried to fight off the large animal but was pulled into nearby woods with his legs bleeding profusely, local media outlets including the Yomiuri daily said.

The man was attacked while he was on a trail on Mount Rausu on the northern island of Hokkaido on Aug 14, a local police spokesman told AFP.

A wallet containing a card that bore his name was found near the scene of the encounter in the north-eastern part of Hokkaido, according to media.

A torn, bloodied shirt believed to be his was also found on Aug 15, with nearby trees and soil dotted with traces of blood, Kyodo news agency said, quoting police.

Among other discovered items were a watch, a hat and what appeared to be tear gas, Kyodo said.

The number of brown bears in Hokkaido fell year on year in 2023 for the first time since 1991, according to latest estimates released in August.

There were about 11,600 at the end of 2023, down 500 from a year earlier.

The Hokkaido government cited unprecedented hunting of brown bears, with a record 1,804 caught in the 12 months to March 2024. AFP

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