A 14 -year -old girl, killed by a lion in Kenya

Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) said a 14 -year -old girl was killed by a lion outside the lobby.

According to the Conservation Bureau, the child was taken away from the residential compound of the ranch next to Nairobi National Park.

The alarm was raised by another teenager, and the KWS Rangers found the remains of elementary school girls along the track to the nearby MBagathi River.

The lion was not found, but KWS said that the trap was set and the search team was placed to find an animal.

The agency added that additional security measures were taken to prevent further attacks.

Nairobi National Park is located at 10 km (6 miles) in the city center and is the home of animals such as lions, buffalo, giraffe, leopard and cheetah.

There is a fence in three aspects to prevent animals from going around the city, but it is open south so that animals can move inside and outside the region.

Lions often collides through Kenya’s human beings, especially livestock, but it is not uncommon for people to kill.

Last year, the CCTV video captured the moment when a lion pulled a loty dog ​​in another house near Nairobi National Park.

KWS also reported that a 54 -year -old man was killed by an elephant on Saturday. This incident occurred in the nairobi country of about 130 km (80 miles) north of the Nairobi.

The elephant grazed in a simple forest when he attacked serious chest injuries, fractured ribs and internal trauma.

He was taken to a nearby hospital and died of injury.

Paula Kahumbu, head of Wildlifedirect Conservation Group, said that KWS urged to improve risks and guarantee accurate real -time communication of wildlife movements and actions.

She also said that all lodges, camps and residential developments near the area where wild animals live, “It should be equipped with an anti -anti -agent suppression system, including lighting, alerts, security fencing and anti -agent sprays.

“Prevention is our first and best defense line,” she added.

Additional Report from Ruth Nesoba and Gladys Kigo in Nairobi