A man who was hit by a bear on Sunday at the Kápolnásfalu border in Szeklerland was taken to hospital with serious injuries, he told his community. Kassaba BourboliMayor of Harghita District. The politician said the 53-year-old was checking on his pets and an electric shepherd when the beast attacked him. He was seriously injured in the chest. The victim was operated on at the Mercuria-Ciuc Emergency Hospital.
This is the second bear attack in Hargita district this week. At dawn on Friday, a 54-year-old shepherd was attacked by a bear on the border of Hidegkút. The victim suffered severe chest and skull injuries, as doctors worked for six hours at Miercurea Seok Emergency Hospital. Also on Friday, a car ran on the county road between Ardungosvozys and Siege in Cluj province. On Thursday, the bear broke into a boarding house and chimney cake shop in Tusnade Bath.
brunette dancing Romania’s Minister of Environment, Water and Forests announced on Friday that the ministry is preparing to amend the law that will allow immediate intervention in the event of bear attacks. The minister said in an interview that when lives are in danger, action must be taken immediately, as firefighters do. Under current regulations, troubled individuals can be fired or removed within sixty days, and the process involves an enormous amount of bureaucracy. The minister also said the number of bear emergency calls in Romania had multiplied tenfold in the past five years and earlier, this year, nine countries were asked to help deal with bears.
It is estimated that the number of wild bears in Romania could be between 6,450 and 7,200, commissioned by the Ministry of Environment in the spring of 2019. According to the 2018 action plan to conserve bear populations, the optimal number of individuals in the 69,000 square kilometer habitat will be herbivores. Big meat in Romania 4000 from an environmental, social and economic point of view. Environmental organizations are vehemently opposed to bear population regulation, which says the business interests of hunting companies lie at the center of regulatory issues.
(MTI)