A runaway zebra led police on a dramatic chase across a golf course in Japan, until its bid for freedom ended in death when it collapsed in a water trap.
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The creature’s odyssey, which was broadcast live on national television, saw officers in hot pursuit as they tried in vain to recapture it alive.
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After unsuccessfully attempting to corral the stripy animal, vets shot it with a tranquiliser dart only to watch as it plunged into a small lake on the golf course. “It collapsed in the pond, so we hurriedly pulled it ashore, but its heart had already stopped beating,” said Takahiro Taniguchi, a police spokesman in central Gifu. “Veterinarians performed cardiac massage,” he said, but it was not enough to prevent the “bitter aftertaste” of the animal’s demise.
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The zebra had bolted on Tuesday from the Mikuni West Farm in neighbouring Aichi. The failed attempt to recapture the creature came just a month after a Tokyo zoo held a drill practising this very eventuality. Every year, a zookeeper dresses as an animal and stages an escape, giving colleagues the opportunity to hone their techniques.
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This year’s creature was a zebra, which was successfully collared and returned to its pen. But as if to prove that practice doesn’t always make perfect, this week’s real life response didn’t quite go to plan.
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According to Ueno Zoo, which staged the zebra escape drill last month, the animals are easily panicked. Japan has previously had more success with animal escapes.In 2012 a penguin on the run from a Tokyo aquarium outwitted authorities for 82 days before being caught. There were more than 30 sightings of the 60-centimetre (two-foot) bird, known only as Penguin 337, who was spotted around various locations, including swimming in Tokyo Bay.