Japan: Zoo employee slips into lion costume – rehearsal for emergencies

Earthquake exercise in Japan
Zoo employees slip into lion costumes and escape – a rehearsal for emergencies

Earthquake exercise in Japan: An employee of the Tennoji Zoo in Osaka takes on the role of the escaped predator in a lion costume

© dpa

At the Tennoji Zoo in Osaka, a staff member dressed in a lion costume took on the role of a predator. The disguise has a serious background: an earthquake exercise. The zoo in Japan is rehearsing for emergencies.

A Japanese zoo has tested a lion’s escape in the event of an earthquake with a curious method: with a funny lion costume. An employee of the Tennoji Zoo in Osaka put on the fluffy onesie with the mighty lion’s head and took on the role of the escaped predator. While he then strutted through the facility on two legs under the curious gaze of visitors, his colleagues with helmets, shields and nets and the support of fire department officials tried to catch the “crazed” employee again. “This may have looked amusing for the visitors, but for us it was a serious exercise,” explained a zoo spokesman in Osaka on Friday to the German Press Agency.

There are regular disaster drills in Japan

Japan is one of the most earthquake-prone countries in the world. Disaster drills are therefore held across the country every year. This time, the zoo in Osaka assumed that a lion escaped from the cage during opening hours as a result of a strong vibration and attacked a zookeeper.

Strictly according to the textbook, the emergency services cornered the anything but threatening-looking “lion” with signs and poles. At the end, a veterinarian aimed at the funny animal with a tranquilizer gun – whereupon the two-legged lion kneeled down a little theatrically, stretched out on all fours – and in the end, probably a little exhausted, wrapped in nets, allowed himself to be transported away. danger averted.

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DPA

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