Two things come to mind:
1) Armchair philosophy and logic.
2) Just a stick to hit the zoo management with (and to whose benefit?).
Finally: old news really. Learn from it (which they obviously have since switching to protected contact) in hindsight. And get on with life.![]()
I think to be fair the zoo management may not have been entirely to blame in the first instance.
These things can often just happen on the spur of the moment , a normally placid animal can turn in an instant, keepers have to react quickly and may not always get it right , the management may have been totally unaware of the situation anyway. Yes ideally there should have been a written protocol or procedure to follow , health and safety guidelines etc , but again there are no guarentees , things go wrong no matter how well you adhere to rules. At the end of the day , the animal should have been tranquilized as soon as possible , it took FAR too long to get under any kind of control. Once the first mistake had been made the situation just escalated out of control which it should not have. They are lucky that all involved got out of it relatively lightly considering.