A Zimbabwe park official has warned people against approaching elephants after a man was reportedly trampled to death whilst taking a photo with one of the animals.

The elephant involved in the incident was shot dead by rangers following the fatality, according to Zimbabwe news outlets.
Another person is said to be in hospital with injuries.
The attack took place outside the Zimbabwe city of Kwekwe, according to local newspaper The Chronicle.
The news outlet said the man, whose name has not been disclosed, reportedly died after being dragged and trampled by the animal.
He was said to have been “taking selfies” with it, Tinashe Farawo, a spokesman for the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Authority (Zimparks) said.
Farawo added, per The Chronicle: “Communities are urged to stay away from the animals and minimise close contact with the animals.
“It is very unfortunate that we have lost life unnecessarily as it could have been avoided.”
The spokesman said park officials are on the ground working with communities so that “no-one provokes the animals”,
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The spokesman also highlighted another incident in which an elephant was shot dead as it was seen approaching a residential area in Kwekwe.
The issue of human-elephant conflict in Zimbabwe is one that Farawo has spoken out about recently.
The country has one of the largest elephant populations in the world, behind Botswana.
According to the African Wildlife Foundation, Zimparks reported 20 human deaths due to elephants between January and October 2019. These human deaths often result in elephants being killed by community members.
In March this year, the African forest elephant and African savanna elephant became listed as Critically Endangered and Endangered, respectively, under the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
Prior to that update both types had been treated as a single species under the vulnerable classification system.
However, Farawo maintains that Zimbabwe is overpopulated with elephants despite concerns about Africa’s elephant population more widely, he told Al Jazeera in June.
Officials in the region announced they were going to sell the rights to shoot as many as 500 elephants this year because of declining tourism revenue amid the COVID pandemic.
But Simiso Mlevu, a spokeswoman for the Center for Natural Resource Governance in Zimbabwe, told CNN the plan was “appalling” and feared the practice “escalates human-wildlife conflicts”.
This is in addition to reports that officials are considering a mass cull to control numbers, according to “Al Jazeera”.
Farawo told the outlet that other options, such as relocating elephants, were hampered by a lack of money from the country’s government.
And I mean…“It is very unfortunate that we lost lives unnecessarily as it could have been avoided.”
I mean that too, and by that I mean the elephant life.
If the elephant population is controlled by human hands through extermination, hunting and eviction from their habitat, then it is fair for an elephant to reduce the human population, the cause of his misery, in the same way.
Zimbabwe’s Wildlife Agency plans to sell the right to shoot 500 elephants this year.
Is it unfortunate too, Tinashe Farawo?
Apparently not, it is business with the live of others who have no rights.
The hunting rights for the elephants are between 10,000 and 70,000 US dollars, depending on the size of the animal.
The hunting season starts in April and lasts until October when the rainy season begins.
Both Botswana and Zimbabwe get most of their hunting tourists from the United States, who pay for the privilege of taking their tusks home as trophies.
Hopefully we will read back soon about several “selfies” human-victims in the press until the end of October.
My best regards to all, Venus
Hunters are violent, dangerous, lying lunatics: kill animals, to save animals, and call it conserving animals.
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