More Experts Join Police in 2nd-day Search for Elusive Berlin Animal

Police officers look at a sign as the search continues after police warned the public that a suspected lioness was on the loose, in Zehlendorf, Berlin, Germany July 20, 2023. The sign reads: "Enter at your own risk when it is snowy or icy". REUTERS/Annegret Hilse
Police officers look at a sign as the search continues after police warned the public that a suspected lioness was on the loose, in Zehlendorf, Berlin, Germany July 20, 2023. The sign reads: "Enter at your own risk when it is snowy or icy". REUTERS/Annegret Hilse
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More Experts Join Police in 2nd-day Search for Elusive Berlin Animal

Police officers look at a sign as the search continues after police warned the public that a suspected lioness was on the loose, in Zehlendorf, Berlin, Germany July 20, 2023. The sign reads: "Enter at your own risk when it is snowy or icy". REUTERS/Annegret Hilse
Police officers look at a sign as the search continues after police warned the public that a suspected lioness was on the loose, in Zehlendorf, Berlin, Germany July 20, 2023. The sign reads: "Enter at your own risk when it is snowy or icy". REUTERS/Annegret Hilse

Experts on animal tracks joined the hunt Friday for an elusive and potentially dangerous animal — suspected to be a lioness — spotted on the edge of Berlin as the search stretched into a second day, authorities said.

Police used helicopters, drones and infrared cameras to search for the animal, with a vet and hunters also part of the effort, The Associated Press reported. They were first alerted to the animal in Kleinmachnow, just outside Berlin's city limits, around midnight on Wednesday when people reported what appeared to be a big cat chasing a wild boar.

The informants also provided a video. Based on that and a subsequent sighting of their own, the police concluded that the animal was apparently a lioness. But it proved elusive in the flat, wooded area on the boundary between Berlin and the surrounding state of Brandenburg.

Kleinmachnow Mayor Michael Grubert told local public broadcaster rbb late Thursday that authorities would try to comb the forest on Friday with “professional animal track searchers.”

“We have to say that this can't carry on for days,” he said, adding that he expected the search to “intensify” on Friday.

Police in Brandenburg state tweeted Friday morning that the search was unsuccessful during the night and was continuing. They urged people to call an emergency number if they see the animal.

Police have said that none of the zoos, animal shelters, circuses or other facilities they checked was missing a lioness, and authorities say they have no information on one being privately owned in the area. Grubert says the aim is to catch the animal, if necessary by tranquilizing it.



Volunteers Clean Up Bali's Beach from 'Worst' Monsoon-driven Trash

Plastic waste and other garbage is cleared from a beach in Kedonganan Badung regency on Indonesia's Bali island. SONNY TUMBELAKA / AFP
Plastic waste and other garbage is cleared from a beach in Kedonganan Badung regency on Indonesia's Bali island. SONNY TUMBELAKA / AFP
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Volunteers Clean Up Bali's Beach from 'Worst' Monsoon-driven Trash

Plastic waste and other garbage is cleared from a beach in Kedonganan Badung regency on Indonesia's Bali island. SONNY TUMBELAKA / AFP
Plastic waste and other garbage is cleared from a beach in Kedonganan Badung regency on Indonesia's Bali island. SONNY TUMBELAKA / AFP

Hundreds of volunteers joined a cleanup in Bali, Indonesia, Saturday as monsoon rains brought what an activist described as "the worst" waves of plastic waste to hit its tourist-favored beaches.
The Southeast Asian nation is one of the world's biggest contributors of plastic pollution and marine debris, with annual monsoon rains and winds sweeping mountains of plastic waste from its cities and rivers into the ocean.
Some of it drifts hundreds of kilometers before washing up on the beaches on the holiday island -- especially between November and March, AFP said.
Across Kedonganan beach in the south of the island, plastic cups, straws, cutlery, and empty coffee sachets were scattered across the sand, mixed with plant and wood debris.
Tons of garbage
Around 600 volunteers, including local residents, hospitality workers, and tourists, braved a rainy morning to pick up the waste by hand before filling hundreds of large sacks.
The Environmental NGO Sungai Watch called it "the worst" plastic waste pollution to wash ashore in Bali.
"We have never seen plastics a meter thick in the sand. In just six days of cleanup, we collected 25 tons, which is a record for us," said Sungai Watch founder Gary Bencheghib.
Bencheghib said an audit found most of the plastic waste came from cities on neighboring Java, Indonesia's most-populated island.

Tatiana Komelova, a Russian tourist volunteer, said the sight of the pollution shocked her, and motivated her to reduce the use of plastic in her daily life.

"I knew the problem existed, but I didn't know it was this bad," she said.

"I use plastic products a lot in my life, and now I try to reduce it as much as possible."