Crocodile mauls woman to death in Indonesia

This handout picture taken on January 14, 2019 and received from conservation group Balai KSDA Sulawesi Utara on January 16 shows a 4.4 metre long crocodile named Merry being secured before being taken out of its enclosure in Minahasa in North Sulawesi, after a woman on January 10 was mauled to death in the reptile’s enclosure. – The giant reptile, which was owned illegally, was sedated and removed from its enclosure on January 14 in a three-hour long operation that involved dozens of people, including conservation officials, the army and police, and will be transferred to a conservation area. (Photo by Handout / Balai KSDA Sulawesi Utara / AFP) 

MINAHASA, Indonesia (AFP) — An Indonesian woman has been mauled to death by a huge pet crocodile on the island of Sulawesi, officials said Wednesday.

Deasy Tuwo, the head of a laboratory at a pearl farm in Minahasa in North Sulawesi, was killed by the 4.4-metre (14-foot) reptile last Thursday, authorities said.

The 44-year old’s badly mauled body was found by colleagues the following morning, Hendrik Rundengan, from the local conservation agency, told AFP.

“The indication is that she fell into the crocodile’s enclosure,” he said, adding the incident was still being investigated by police.

The crocodile, named Merry, had eaten one of the woman’s hands and most of her abdomen was missing, Rundengan said.

“These parts may still be inside the crocodile now,” he added.

The giant reptile was sedated and removed from its enclosure Monday in a three-hour operation that involved dozens of people, including conservation officials, the army and police.

The reptile, which was owned illegally, will be transferred to a conservation area, Rundengan said.

The Indonesian archipelago is home to a vast array of exotic wildlife, including several species of crocodile that regularly attack and kill humans.

In April 2016, a Russian tourist was killed by a crocodile in the Raja Ampat islands, a popular diving site in the east of the archipelago.

© Agence France-Presse