The employee, who was not identified, was rushed by helicopter to the
hospital, where he later died. "It is fact that the kid was inside the
enclosure when he was attacked," police spokesman Alexander Marik said.
"That we know."
Four visitors, described as a family, witnessed the
attack, but were unharmed. They were inside the enclosure to see what
it was like to work as an animal keeper by getting close to the animals
and helping to feed them, park spokesman Sven Brunberg said. The visitors fled the enclosure when the attack
started, Marik said. "I don't know what happened in this case. I will
leave that up to the investigators to find out," he added. The
2-year-old bear was euthanized after the attack, Brunberg said. The attack is being investigated as a workplace
accident. Orsa Rovdjurspark, located 330 kilometers (205 miles) north of
Stockholm, has predators that include different species of bears,
leopards, lynxes and wolves. The park said on its Facebook page it would remain
closed for the rest of day but would reopen Saturday. In 2012, a female
employee at the Kolmarden Wildlife Park, south of Stockholm, was killed
by a pack of wolves she had helped raise.
A former animal park manager was later found guilty
of manslaughter by breaching Swedish workplace safety laws. The park
was fined 4 million kronor ($493,000) for negligence.
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