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POST TIME: 3 February, 2016 00:00 00 AM
British tourist trampled to death by Thai elephant
AFP, British

British tourist trampled to death by Thai elephant

AFP, British: A British tourist has been trampled to death by an elephant on the Thai tourist island of Koh Samui, police said Tuesday, the latest deadly attack by animals used to entertain holidaymakers.
The man, identified by police as Gareth Crowe, 36, was riding on the animal's back with his daughter on Monday afternoon when it suddenly threw them off, police said.
"We suspect that the hot weather made the elephant angry and that he was not accustomed to his mahout," Paiboon Omark, Samui district chief, told AFP.
A mahout is the person who trains, controls and rides an elephant, usually after years of building up a close bond with the animal.
Paiboon said Crowe had a prosthetic leg and was unable to run away from the marauding pachyderm.
His daughter and the mahout, a Myanmar national, were both injured but escaped and were out of danger, he added.
The elephant, named "Golf", was tranquillised and brought under control, he said. A spokesman at the British embassy said they were aware of the incident and were providing assistance to the victim's family.
Thailand has an estimated 4,000 domesticated elephants, many working in the tourism trade, alongside some 2,500 wild elephants.
In August, an elephant killed his mahout with three terrified Chinese tourists still on his back. The tourists survived.
Thailand's use of animals for tourism is under increased scrutiny following a string of scandals and investigations by rights groups.