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Feb 7, 2010
Man fights off tiger attack
KUALA LUMPUR - A 47-YEAR-OLD tribesman gathering food in a north Malaysian forest fought off a tiger attack armed only with a rock, a newspaper reported on Saturday. The attack in the jungles of Perak state on Saturday left Yok Meneh with a wide and deep gash on his back and injuries to his hands and legs, the Sunday Star newspaper reported. Yok Meneh told the newspaper he had been collecting wild green beans and other vegetables when the tiger attacked him. 'I was so engrossed in collecting petai (green beans) that I did not notice the tiger had crept up behind me,' he said.
'The moment I realised I had to save myself I tried to grab anything I could with my hands. I found a rock, grabbed it and fought back, hitting the tiger on its head again and again until it slunk away.' 'Bedraggled and bleeding,' Yok Meneh was found by his wife, who with the help of workers from a nearby oil palm estate took him to hospital, the newspaper reported. In 2008 Malaysia unveiled an ambitious 'National Tiger Action Plan' aimed at doubling the number of wild tigers in peninsular Malaysia to 1,000 by 2020. -- AFP
Home > Breaking News > SE Asia > Story
Feb 7, 2010
Man fights off tiger attack
KUALA LUMPUR - A 47-YEAR-OLD tribesman gathering food in a north Malaysian forest fought off a tiger attack armed only with a rock, a newspaper reported on Saturday. The attack in the jungles of Perak state on Saturday left Yok Meneh with a wide and deep gash on his back and injuries to his hands and legs, the Sunday Star newspaper reported. Yok Meneh told the newspaper he had been collecting wild green beans and other vegetables when the tiger attacked him. 'I was so engrossed in collecting petai (green beans) that I did not notice the tiger had crept up behind me,' he said.
'The moment I realised I had to save myself I tried to grab anything I could with my hands. I found a rock, grabbed it and fought back, hitting the tiger on its head again and again until it slunk away.' 'Bedraggled and bleeding,' Yok Meneh was found by his wife, who with the help of workers from a nearby oil palm estate took him to hospital, the newspaper reported. In 2008 Malaysia unveiled an ambitious 'National Tiger Action Plan' aimed at doubling the number of wild tigers in peninsular Malaysia to 1,000 by 2020. -- AFP