This time, a group of monkeys...China Strikes Back by Protective Animals

2024.11.29. PM 11:29
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[Anchor]
A swarm of monkeys appeared in a rural village in China and created a field of mugwort.

In accordance with animal protection policies, there is also a series of damage caused by the appearance of tigers and wild boars, whose populations have increased.

This is Beijing correspondent Kang Jeong-gyu.

[Reporter]
A swarm of monkeys climbs up a drain and a wire.

Tiled roof tiles are thrown from the roof, and grain or crops dried in the sun are eaten.

On the 26th, a group of about 100 monkeys attacked a rural area in Guangxi Province in southern China.

Monkeys are protected animals, so they cannot hurt or scare them. I have no choice but to install a machine that makes a barking sound and send it back to the mountain.]

On the 18th, a tiger that bit a person and ran away from the northeastern Heilongjiang province has not been caught yet.

It's trickier that you have to capture it alive because it's a protected animal.

As the number of wild tigers living in the reserve increased to about 70, the prevention of similar accidents has also been put on alert.

[Peng Li Guo / Jilin Province Yanbian Autonomous Prefectural Committee Head: Once a tiger enters the camera surveillance network, it shoots sound waves away and spreads them to the villagers at the same time]

The wild boar blows away the iron door that even the tiger couldn't completely break at once.

They run around and attack people, or they show up on subway tracks how they got in.

The number of wild boars in China estimated in January this year was 2 million, and since June last year, they have been excluded from protected species.

Some areas have even encouraged capture.

On the 24th, an old man was bitten and killed by an excited wild boar during the hunting process.

[Victim's bereaved family: A wild boar chased by four hounds released in the mountains entered my yard, causing an accident of life.]

Due to the counterattack of protected animals, Chinese authorities are now struggling to come up with measures to fight upside down.

I'm Kang Jeong-gyu from Beijing.

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