here's a couple more news items. I've highlighted a few sentences. You really do have to wonder why when they knew this particular tiger was easily spooked they were still going into the cage with it (well, we know why but its still a stupid practice to have). In another news item from yesterday the cage was described as resembling a large dog kennel by the police.
New Zealand & World News - Yahoo!Xtra News
Staff 'at risk' before death | Stuff.co.nz
New Zealand & World News - Yahoo!Xtra News
The South African animal keeper mauled to death at the Zion Wildlife Park in Whangarei had rescued a colleague from the jaws of the same 260kg tiger in February.
In that attack, Dalu Mncube, Zion Wildlife Gardens' most experienced big-cat keeper, plunged his fingers into the gap between the tiger's 75mm-long teeth, before using a fire extinguisher to force the animal to release his Australian colleague, Demetri Price.
But there was no similar rescue for him yesterday, when the tiger tore into his abdomen and lower leg, while two keepers were cleaning the tiger enclosure.
Northland police spokeswoman Sarah Kennett said that despite the best efforts of the other keeper, the tiger wouldn't let go, and Mr Mncube died at the scene before an ambulance arrived.
Staff shot the tiger, Abu, to recover Mr Mncube's body.
Eight foreign tourists on a tour of the park witnessed the attack, and an Auckland man who was visiting the park with two friends from the United Kingdom said: "It was very, very frightening."
Some of the tourists were understood to be French-speaking New Caledonians.
Mr Mncube said at the time of the February attack that it was over before he knew it, though Mr Price suffered four bites.
"I never got scared," Mr Mncube told The New Zealand Herald: "You stay nice and calm. If I got scared and panicked we could have had two casualties."
Mr Mncube said all keepers knew to keep calm if an animal bit.
Abu, the park's biggest Bengal white tiger, was not one of the tigers that interact with the public because of his tendency to get frightened.
Mr Price said the attack on him occurred when Abu got scared while he was being moved and bit him four times because the cat feared he was being cornered. Abu was biting his knee, and he had him in "tooth block" hold, holding the tiger's lips over his teeth, when Mr Mncube stepped in.
"If you're doing this type of work and you haven't thought about it happening then you shouldn't be doing your job," said Mr Price after being treated for his injuries.
Mr Mncube's friend and colleague, Glen Holland, described him as "larger than life".
"People enjoyed being with him, people enjoyed being around him, he had an incredible ability with the cats, he said. "The best that we've seen at the park."
"Dalu was really the heartbeat of the whole lot -- keeping everybody together," he said.
The South African, known as "Uncle Dalu", had replaced Craig Busch, star of the Lion Man TV series, as the park's senior cat handler.
Mr Holland moved to Zion from Auckland Zoo after Mr Busch lost his zoo operator's licence.
The park will be working with police, and officials from the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, and Department of Labour today to try and establish exactly what happened in the fatal attack, Mr Holland said.
Mr Busch, who is in the middle of an employment dispute with his estranged mother and park owner Patricia Busch, said the mauling was an "a terrible personal blow".
He claimed during Employment Relations Authority hearing on Tuesday that animal welfare and safety standards had slipped at the park since the breakdown of his relationship with his mother.
Staff 'at risk' before death | Stuff.co.nz
A keeper mauled to death by a rare white tiger had previously prised the jaws of the same animal from a colleague's mangled leg.
Horrified tourists watched yesterday as the tiger pounced on South African Dalu Mncube, the senior cat handler at Zion Wildlife Gardens in Whangarei, about 11am.
The attack is the third at the park in just over a year. It has sparked investigations by police, the Labour Department, MAF and the coroner while other zoos and keepers have spoken out against the park's intimate style of handling its animals.
The tiger, one of only 120 of the endangered animals in the world, was shot dead by park staff moments after the attack and the facility has been closed until further notice.
Mncube, known as "Uncle Dalu" a fixture at the park which is also the home of "Lion Man" Craig Busch was preparing to clean a cage with another keeper when the cat leapt at him.
Eight tourists, including two children, witnessed the mauling. A visitor from Auckland said he had taken two British friends to the park.
"It was very, very frightening... We were all there when it happened. We are all very shaken at the moment."
Mncube's death echoed an attack in February when fellow keeper Demetri Price was mauled by a white tiger called Abu, believed to be the cat that killed Mncube.
When the tiger locked its jaws on Price's knee, Mncube pulled the cat's teeth apart with his hands before blasting it with a fire extinguisher.
Price last night hailed Mncube as a "very, very unique man", but criticised the park's management saying it endangered keepers.
"I was no longer willing to take the risk that was involved with working there."
Last year, a Scottish teenager working at the park was attacked by a lion cub when she put her hands through a fence.
Zion's Glen Holland said staff would be offered counselling.
"This is a fantastic person, he is a personal friend and everybody is devastated by it."
The centre would co-operate with the investigations, he said.
MAF oversees zoos and wildlife parks with annual safety audits. Its guidelines for big cats ban direct contact "unless an animal is hand-reared or suitably conditioned".
Wellington Zoo general manager of operations Mauritz Basson said close handling of big cats was common around the world, but he would never support it at his zoo.
"They are immensely powerful. You need to be alert and you need to stay alert and that's how you stay alive."
Zion's website includes an advertisement for a tiger walk, where "best of all, you will be able to pat the tiger". Keepers routinely hug and interact with the big cats.
Former keeper Bob Bennett, who was attacked while working at Wellington Zoo in 2006, said Busch "used to take a lot more risks than I would have" with big cats.
"He was a great guy, but some of the things he did I wouldn't approve of."
Zion is in an employment battle with Busch, who became famous internationally as the "Lion Man" after a television show.
Yesterday, he called Mncube's death "a terrible personal blow".
Orana Wildlife Park animal-collection manager Ian Adams said one of its "golden rules" was that handlers never entered an enclosure with big cats and always kept two locked gates between themselves and the animals.
Not having a barrier between them and the park's two Sumatran tigers was a "complete no-no".
"They can be as friendly as and as good as gold, but we never know when it's going to go wrong," he said.
"Tigers are quite a bit different from lions. They are more assertive and more unpredictable. It is a much more intense animal."
Even the smallest tigers could weigh up to 120 kilograms and were "like a four-wheel-drive".
"They are hugely strong for their size and there is nothing you can do [in an attack], unless you destroy the animal first," Adams said.