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Giant cat alert after London man
attacked by beast
London -
A giant puma-like cat was feared to be on the loose in one of London's
leafiest suburbs after a man said he had been pounced on by a
creature, which then stood hissing on his chest.
Anthony-John Holder, who escaped with
scratches and bruising after the incident in his garden in Sydenham
Park, a suburb in the southeast of the capital, said he feared the
animal could kill someone.
Holder, 37, had ventured to the
bottom of his garden late on Monday after hearing his own pet cat
howling.
"All of a sudden I see this big black
thing pouncing at me, knocked me flying. I was just stunned with it
all," he told the London-based radio station LBC.
"I just didn't know where I was, and
the next thing there was this big black figure laying on my chest.
"It was growling, growling at me and
hissing and it then started scratching."
Holder said he had used "brute force"
to push the animal, described as being roughly the size of a Labrador
dog, away from him.
"This thing knew what it wanted. If I
was weak... I think it could have killed me and then it could have
gone on to hurt my family and everything else. I do think it would
have done damage to someone," he said.
Police, who were called by the
terrified Holder, said they were seeking advice from London Zoo and
the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which
deals with stray animals in Britain.
"We are advising the local public if
they see the animal, do not approach it and to report it to police
using (emergency number) 999 and to keep pets indoors," a spokesman
said.
In recent years, sightings of giant
cats have been reported throughout Britain, but although livestock
have supposedly been attacked a number of times there have been
virtually no instances of encounters with humans.
Initially dismissed by scientists as
unlikely, evidence from pawprints and droppings has led many to
conclude that a number of big cats, perhaps released into the wild
from private zoos, are roaming the country.
The notion of a puma living in London
is also not as far-fetched as it might seem.
Despite its size and population,
London has far more green spaces than most similar-sized cities, both
in hundreds of public parks and squares and through the gardens of
terraced homes, which form the bulk of its housing stock.
Around 15,000 foxes are believed to
live in the capital, as well as a large number of squirrels and other
creatures. --
AFP News
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