It only took moments for a boy to find his way into a US zoo’s gorilla enclosure on the weekend, sparking an incident which led to the killing of the endangered animal, according to a witness.
Kimberley Perkins-O’Conor told CNN she was at the Cincinnati Zoo’s gorilla enclosure when the incident began and heard the three-year-old boy joking with his mother about going into the enclosure’s moat.
She said the boy got in while the mother was briefly distracted by other children who were with her.
“All of a sudden you heard a splash and an older gentleman started yelling ‘there’s a child in there, there’s a child’ and everyone started screaming,” she said.
“The larger gorilla was attracted to the screaming and he just came barrelling to the edge of the moat and then realised what’s going on.”
She said the gorilla, a 200 kilogram animal named Harambe, did not initially act aggressively towards the boy and instead appeared to be “helping him”.
“He dragged the child a little further down into the moat and he … almost looked like he was helping him, pulled his pants up, stood him up, and then all of the sudden everybody started screaming again, and he pulled him completely out,” she said.
Ms Perkins-O’Conor told CNN the screams of those watching on seemed to agitate the animal.
“I saw him again later, once he was on top of the habitat, dragging the boy, pulling him underneath him. It was not a good scene,” she said.