Fatal Tiger Attack Claims Indonesian Man’s Life – 2nd Incident This Year
Riau Province, Sumatra – A 34‑year‑old Indonesian laborer was tragically killed when a Sumatran tiger mauled him while working near a construction site. The incident, which made headlines last Sunday, marks the second fatal attack in the country this year.
The Scene
- Yusri Effendi was building a structure to attract edible‑nest swiftlets in Tanjung Simpang village.
- The tiger was already nosing around the site when the workers spotted it.
- Thinking they had cleared the area, Effendi and his three teammates sprinted to safety, but the animal was closer than they’d hoped.
- While the group scattered and survived, Effendi didn’t get the chance.
Aftermath
Later that night, a search party found Effendi unconscious beside a river, unmoving. When authorities opened his jacket, they discovered a gaping neck wound—a brutal reminder of the encounter.
Why It Happens
Across Indonesia’s sprawling archipelago, human‑animal clashes are common, especially as deforestation for palm oil plantations shrinks wildlife habitats. This shrinking forest means tigers and people increasingly cross paths, sometimes in deadly ways.
More Horrific Example
Earlier this month, villagers in Hatupangan, North Sumatra, disemboweled a tiger after it attacked two people, then hung the carcass from a ceiling—a gruesome display of the ongoing conflict.
Conservation Status
Sumatran tigers are critically endangered, with only 400‑500 left in the wild. Protecting them has never been more urgent—especially when it’s their homes that pose the danger.
