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154th: Cleaner Kena Eaten No Big Deal; Tigers Kena Traumatized Lagi Worse!

makapaaa

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<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR>Tigers stressed by the incident
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<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->THE two white tigers involved in Thursday's attack on a cleaner are exhibiting symptoms of stress.
Normally relaxed and languid, they are now on constant alert, zoo officials said yesterday.
Their ears are pricked up, and they are breathing heavily.
Only Winnie and Jippie, the two female cats which carried out the attack, are showing these symptoms.
The other white tiger in the enclosure, Omar, a male, showed no interest in the cleaner, Mr Nordin Montong, 32, and stayed well away from him.
Omar is behaving normally.
The two other cats are stressed out because of the commotion that occurred during the attack, said the zoo's assistant director Biswajit Guha.
Onlookers screamed and keepers flung objects at the animals to try to distract them on Thursday.
The cats' heightened senses were thus thrown off-kilter, Mr Guha said, adding that they were probably traumatised because they had not experienced anything like it before.
It was also the first time they had come into close contact with a human being since they arrived in Singapore from Indonesia seven years ago, Mr Guha said, and their sense of smell was probably affected.
Even during feeding and cleaning, keepers stay well clear of the big cats.
When meal times roll around, a keeper lures the cats into a holding area behind the exhibit, places about 5kg of raw meat in the enclosure, then leaves it before letting the cats back in.
Mr Guha said: 'The rule is that no one is allowed to enter an enclosure in the presence of a potentially dangerous animal.
'All staff members know this.'
Over the next few days, zoo officials will try and calm the cats down by sticking to their usual routine.
This includes checks by keepers in the mornings to make sure the tigers' bodily functions are working well, raw meat feeding sessions once daily and 'enrichment classes' three times a week.
These classes involve hurling a fibreglass ball full of raw meat into the enclosure to encourage the tigers to exercise and to stimulate their brain activity.
The white tiger exhibit is currently closed, and the animals have been restricted to the den area.
If all goes well, the cats will be let out again on Monday, and the exhibit will be reopened, said Mr Guha.
He added that the tigers were not overly aggressive, and had merely shown behaviour that comes naturally to big cats.
In fact, he said, the zoo's tigers are conditioned to the presence of human beings and are likely to be less aggressive around them than their cousins in the wild.
He added: 'It is only when they feel threatened, feel their territory is intruded upon, or view an object as potential prey that they attack. Usually, they would keep away.'
JESSICA LIM
 

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
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<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR>Nov 15, 2008
TIGER MAULING
</TR><!-- headline one : start --><TR>Cleaner's family in shock
</TR><!-- headline one : end --><TR>He sounded fine when he called home on Wednesday, says sister </TR><!-- Author --><TR><TD class="padlrt8 georgia11 darkgrey bold" colSpan=2>By Diana Othman & Kimberly Spykerman
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The white tiger exhibit has been closed temporarily following the mauling of 32-year-old zoo cleaner Nordin Montong in the enclosure on Thursday. -- ST PHOTO: DESMOND LIM
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<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->SINCE he arrived in Singapore in June, Mr Nordin Montong had called his mother three or four times a day.
He would ask her how the family was and if she had eaten. Little things, just to chat.
<TABLE width=200 align=left valign="top"><TBODY><TR><TD class=padr8><!-- Vodcast --><!-- Background Story --><STYLE type=text/css> #related .quote {background-color:#E7F7FF; padding:8px;margin:0px 0px 5px 0px;} #related .quote .headline {font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size:10px;font-weight:bold; border-bottom:3px double #007BFF; color:#036; text-transform:uppercase; padding-bottom:5px;} #related .quote .text {font-size:11px;color:#036;padding:5px 0px;} </STYLE>White tiger facts
THE zoo's assistant director, Mr Biswajit Guha, 40, gave several insights into the behaviour of tigers yesterday.

White tigers differ from their black-and-orange cousins only in colour, he said. They have the same natural instincts as all the big cats, which he described as 'nature's killing machines', programmed to respond in a certain way - for example, when a stranger enters their territory.


</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>It was the same in his last call to her on Wednesday, the night before the 32-year-old cleaner from Sarawak climbed into a tiger enclosure at the Singapore Zoo and was mauled to death after he seemingly baited the big cats.
His family in Kuching is still reeling from the news.
'When we first heard the news, we were shocked and panicked as the last we heard from him, he was healthy and fine,' said his older sister, Madam Nora Montong, 38. 'We did not sense anything was wrong or that he had any problems.'
His 53-year-old mother had become worried on Thursday when her second of six children did not call her as usual.
Said Madam Nora: 'She has been crying now whenever she thinks about him.'
Unable to afford the flight to Singapore, they are awaiting his body, which will be flown home today.
But though his family had no inkling of the turmoil in his mind, his roommates and fellow workers noticed that he was not behaving quite like himself.
Mr Fabian Anak, 26, his colleague of two months who shared a Serangoon apartment with him and other workers, said that the usually jovial man was sombre on Thursday.
He said: 'He hadn't been able to sleep till 3am. He just sat in a chair.'
Another cleaner, Mr Clement Ijau, who lived next door, noticed that Mr Nordin seemed dazed and ignored the people around him.
Fifteen minutes before he went into the enclosure, he reportedly told colleagues they would not be seeing him again.
If he had problems, no one knew. Another colleague, Mr Mohd Rafiq Nasirin, said Mr Nordin was a quiet man who kept matters to himself.
The cleaner from Sarawak had worked at a hotel when he first arrived but left shortly after for a job at the zoo.
Mr Mohd Rafiq said that Mr Nordin had wanted to apply for a transfer to the Night Safari.

=> And kena snubbed at?

According to Madam Nora, her brother had planned to return home in February next year after he had saved enough cash to marry and start a family.
At the mortuary yesterday, Mr Nordin's body - wrapped in a simple white sheet - was received by his employer, Sun City Maintenance, which will bear all costs of embalming and transportation.
Undertaker Roland Tay, 51, will donate his payment of $3,000 to Mr Nordin's family.
They are now bereft of a son and brother as well as any clues which might have accounted for his death.
Madam Nora said: 'We are as confused as everyone. We were not able to be there with him so we could not fathom what he was going through.
'All we can do now is wait for his body to return to Kuching so we can see him again before we bury him.'
[email protected] [email protected]
 

halsey02

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Three white Sumatran Tigers are rarerer than one ordinary species Sabah Malaysians, that is why they are more concern that the tigers are under stress.

Wondering if the cleaner from Sabah, jumped into the tiger exhibit to get bitten, so as to claim inusurance compensation, so that, he will have the money to go home to Sabah and get married?. Somewhere that stupid idea backfired, and the tigers bit him to death.

Next time you all go to the Mandai Zoo in Singapore, PLEASE DO NOT STRESS THE ANIMALS, they are worth more than you!!!
 
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