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Escaped tiger shot after man killed in Georgia

A vehicle carrying a white tiger shot in Tbilisi, Georgia.  Picture by Shakh Aivazov, Associated Press
A vehicle carrying a white tiger shot in Tbilisi, Georgia. Picture by Shakh Aivazov, Associated Press A vehicle carrying a white tiger shot in Tbilisi, Georgia. Picture by Shakh Aivazov, Associated Press

A WHITE tiger that broke loose after severe flooding at the Tbilisi Zoo in Georgia mauled a man to death before being shot by police.

The Interior Ministry in the former Soviet republic said the tiger was hiding at an abandoned factory that had been turned into a construction depot when he attacked the man. The victim later died of his wounds at a hospital.

"We entered the depot and, suddenly, a white tiger rushed out of an adjacent room and attacked one of the workers, jumping at his throat and mauling him," colleague Alexander Shavbulashvili said.

"We broke the window of another room to flee, and the sound of breaking glass must have scared it and it ran away."

Police commandos rushed to the site and killed the tiger.

"It was a white tiger," Interior Minister Vakhtang Gomelauri said.

"We wanted to sedate it, but it was very aggressive and we had to liquidate it."

An earlier ministry claim that the tiger also wounded another man proved wrong.

Zoo spokeswoman Khatia Basilashvili could not immediately offer any details about the dead tiger.

The Georgian government harshly criticized zoo officials yesterday for failing to provide reliable information.

On Tuesday, zoo officials said all eight lions, seven tigers and at least two of the zoo's three jaguars were killed in the flooding in Georgia's capital.

The flooding, triggered by torrential rains over the weekend, killed at least 19 people, destroyed houses and tore up roads. Six people remain missing.

The zoo said on Wednesday that one of its 17 penguins was found alive by Georgian border guards in the Kura River near the border with Azerbaijan, 25 miles east of the capital. Eight other penguins had been found alive earlier.

Zoo officials say less than half of the zoo's 600 inhabitants have survived the flooding.