Steve has done an interview with the ABC, here’s a snippet posted on instagram -
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DL1DIyQynA4/
Here’s the caption, with some additional
info:
Darling Downs Zoo, south of Toowoomba, has reopened two days after a woman lost her arm in a lioness attack.
The zoo's full program of visitor activities resumed this morning, however Workplace Health and Safety Queensland continues to investigate the circumstances around Sunday's incident.
Owner Steven Robinson says the injured woman is his sister-in-law, a schoolteacher from NSW. "In the enclosure, my wife and a carnivore keeper had just finished cleaning it out, so the animals ... were in a holding enclosure," he said.
"They had just come out of the enclosure ... [and were] locking up the gates and they heard the call [for help]."
Mr Robinson says his sister-in-law has stayed at the zoo regularly over the past 20 years and is aware of the safety regulations.
He says he is yet to speak to her, as she is still recovering in Brisbane's Princess Alexandra Hospital, but that she did not enter the enclosure.
"Nobody saw what happened ... it was all over in a yet,
split second," Mr Robinson says.
He says one of the zoo's keepers, who is well-versed in first aid, "saved her life".
I think you can pretty clearly see the stress and upset both the incident and the social media/media reaction has understandably caused him and his family. It’s nice to see DDZ has continued their history of keeping the public as up to date as they can with events, positive and negative. My thoughts are certainly with the Robinson family and DDZ team at this time