Eight-year-old female tiger was shot after being spotted in a residential area near where it escaped in the Walkerville region south of Johannesburg.

A tiger that has escaped from a private farm in South Africa and attacked a man and killed two dogs and a pig while on the loose for days was euthanised.
Sheba, an 8-year-old female tiger was shot on Wednesday in the early hours of the morning after being spotted in a residential area near where it escaped in the Walkerville region south of Johannesburg, police said. Sheba, who was kept as a pet in an enclosure on a smallholding, escaped on Saturday.
Officials said it was impossible to safely capture the big cat and its owner gave the go-ahead for it to be euthanised.
“Due to the terrain and area it was not possible to contain her or secure her safely," said Gresham Mandy, a community police group representative.
“At 3:45 a.m. the decision was made to euthanise her while it was still safe to do so. Unfortunately at that moment in time darting her was not an option.”
Mandy said it was “not an easy decision” but the safety of the community was “a priority.”
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Midvaal Local Municipality Mayor Peter Teixeira is calling for a tightening of legislation to regulate the domestication of wild animals after a tigress escaped from a small holding in Walkerville south of Johannesburg. @TumaoleNewz reports.
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William Mokoena told South African TV station eNCA how he had been attacked by the tiger on Saturday night while he was walking home from a grocery store.
Mokoena said the tiger pounced on him when he bent down to tie a shoelace and tried to drag him away. He used his legs to fight the tiger off, he said.
Exotic animals as pets
Search officials used drones and a helicopter to try to locate Sheba. The big cat was finally tracked down in a nearby farming area and close to a number of homes, Mandy said.
The tiger's escape has prompted animal welfare organisations to question South Africa's laws around keeping exotic animals as pets. Animal protection group the SPCA said it was concerning that a license was not required to have exotic animals in the Gauteng province where Sheba was kept.
“This tigress, which has already displayed the behavior of a tiger in the wild, did not wander into a residential area on her own," the SPCA said. “She was unwillingly brought there to be held in captivity, something that should not have been allowed to take place to begin with."
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