Familja bëjnë selfie me ariun polar që e kishte vrarë fqinji i tyre

Këto selfie të çuditshme janë të një familje që u bënë pranë një ariu polar të vdekur, e që fqinji i tyre e kishte gjuajtur me armë nga 130 metra dhe e kishte vrarë.

Bota

24/07/2016 01:12

Pak para se të bëhen këto fotografi, familja ishin tmerruar kur e kanë parë kafshën duke vrapuar në drejtim të tyre, përcjell lajmi.net

Një fqinj i kishte dëgjuar britmat e familjes dhe e ka vrarë ariun me një plumb të vetëm nga 130 metra larg.

Por, në vend se të gëzohen që i mbijetuan tmerrit, nëna kishte vendosur të bënte fotografi me ariun, madje duke e lejuar edhe vajzën e saj të vogël.

Ngjarja ka ndodhur në veri të qytetit të Blönduós, në Islandë dhe në këtë vend nuk ekziston ligj që dënon gjuajtjen e këtyre kafshëve, ngase ato nuk janë prezente afër dhe rruga që kalojnë për të ardhur deri tek vendi, nënkupton që janë të uritura dhe të rrezikshme për njerëzit./lajmi.net

Pic shows: Karitas Gudrunardottir with the shot bear.nnA family in Iceland posted bizarre selfies of themselves with a dead polar bear after a neighbour shot the animal when it swam ashore.nnPolar bears (Ursus maritimus) are not native to Iceland, but occasionally turn up after drifting over on ice flows from Greenland although on this occasion in summer it is believed that the animal simply swam.nnIn Iceland there is a policy of shooting all polar bears on site because having travelled a long way they are regarded as hungry and dangerous to humans.nnThe female polar bear had been spotted by Karitas Gudrunardottir and her husband Egill Thor Bjarnason, who are both farmers who were on a riding tour north of the town Blonduos.nnThe pair instantly locked themselves and their children in the farmhouse, and notified a neighbour who dispatched the polar bear with a single bullet from 130 metres away.nnThey also notified the police who also warned other people in the area to stay indoors.nnThe carcass of the dead bear was picked up by a mechanical excavator and eventually ended up in refrigeration in nearby Skagastrond but not before the family had taken some selfies, and posted them online.nnThe Icelandic Institute of Natural History will receive the carcass and dissect it and Kristjan Thorbjornsson, chief superintendent in Saudarkrokur town, said that as soon as the animal came ashore in Iceland its fate was sealed.nnHe told local media: "There was never any doubt that it would not have to be shot because they were inhabited dwellings nearby, the closest farm was only a few hundred metres away and tourists were also camped around a kilometre away."nnIt is the first polar bear sighting in Iceland since 2010, while another two were shot and killed in the north-western part of the country in 2008. The animal will probably be stuffed and displayed in a museum.nnThere have only been a few hundred recorded sightings of polar bears in Iceland throughout re

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