Elephant kills tourist at Thai national park
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The authorities will meet on Feb 6 to decide what to do with the elephant named Oyewan.
PHOTO: PIXABAY
BANGKOK – A wild bull elephant killed a tourist in central Thailand’s Khao Yai National Park on Feb 2, a park official said, the third fatality linked to the same animal.
The 65-year-old Thai tourist from Lopburi province was out for a morning walk with his wife when he was trampled to death by an elephant named Oyewan, national park chief Chaiya Huayhongthong told AFP.
His wife managed to escape after park rangers scared the animal away, Mr Chaiya said.
“He was the third person killed by Oyewan,” he said, adding that the wild bull elephant could have been responsible for several more deaths that remain unsolved.
Mr Chaiya said the authorities will meet on Feb 6 to decide what to do with the elephant.
“We will probably decide to relocate him or change his behaviour,” he said, without elaborating.
More than 220 people, including tourists, have been killed by wild elephants since 2012, according to the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation.
Wild elephant numbers in Thailand rose from 334 in 2015 to almost 800 in 2025, prompting the authorities to administer contraceptive vaccines to female animals in an effort to control their ballooning population.
An elephant killed a Spanish tourist while she was bathing the animal at a sanctuary in southern Thailand in January 2025.
Another tourist was killed by an elephant at a national park in Loei province in northern Thailand in December 2024. AFP


