37-Hour Wild Animal Hunt in Kleinmachnow: Difference between revisions
Dinu (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Dinu (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
|Used hashtags=#Löwin | |Used hashtags=#Löwin | ||
|Long description=On July 20, 2023, a free-roaming wild animal was spotted in Kleinmachnow, a suburb of Berlin. A video has been shared in a chat group and then uploaded to Twitter. Police received an emergency call and moved out to find the animal. According to an initial assessment of the video, the wild animal was a lioness. As a result, a very elaborate and costly search was conducted. Hundreds of police units were deployed, helicopters, drones and thermal imaging cameras were used. | |Long description=On July 20, 2023, a free-roaming wild animal was spotted in Kleinmachnow, a suburb of Berlin. A video has been shared in a chat group and then uploaded to Twitter. Police received an emergency call and moved out to find the animal. According to an initial assessment of the video, the wild animal was a lioness. As a result, a very elaborate and costly search was conducted. Hundreds of police units were deployed, helicopters, drones and thermal imaging cameras were used. | ||
The search for the wild animal lasted 37 hours and attracted worldwide attention. | The search for the wild animal lasted 37 hours and attracted worldwide attention. | ||
According to New York Times reporter that others had fun with the chaos, and memes abounded: >The Twitter page for Deutsche Bahn, the national German railway operator, tweeted a helpful reminder that while house cats and smaller pets did not need their own tickets, larger pets, “other than companion lions,” required their own train passes.> | According to New York Times reporter that others had fun with the chaos, and memes abounded: >The Twitter page for Deutsche Bahn, the national German railway operator, tweeted a helpful reminder that while house cats and smaller pets did not need their own tickets, larger pets, “other than companion lions,” required their own train passes.> | ||
In the end, it turned out that the animal was a wild boar | In the end, it turned out that the animal was a wild boar |
Revision as of 11:43, 31 August 2023
Last edited: 18 November 2023
Hazard:
Public SafetyYear:
2023Location:
Brandenburg/BerlilnScale:
CountyPublishing Organisation
unknown
Category
Real-world
Theme
Social Media
Thematic
- Collecting and Analysing Information from SMCS
- Ensuring Credible Information
Disaster Management Phase
During
Description
On July 20, 2023, a free-roaming wild animal was spotted in Kleinmachnow, a suburb of Berlin. A video has been shared in a chat group and then uploaded to Twitter. Police received an emergency call and moved out to find the animal. According to an initial assessment of the video, the wild animal was a lioness. As a result, a very elaborate and costly search was conducted. Hundreds of police units were deployed, helicopters, drones and thermal imaging cameras were used.
The search for the wild animal lasted 37 hours and attracted worldwide attention.
According to New York Times reporter that others had fun with the chaos, and memes abounded: >The Twitter page for Deutsche Bahn, the national German railway operator, tweeted a helpful reminder that while house cats and smaller pets did not need their own tickets, larger pets, “other than companion lions,” required their own train passes.>
In the end, it turned out that the animal was a wild boar