man killed by tiger that mauled boy in 2004
2010-01-11
Katherine Laidlaw, National Post
The same Siberian tiger that mauled a 10-year-old Toronto boy six years ago
killed a lifelong exotic animal lover and keeper yesterday, police say.
"We believe it to be the same animal," said Constable Troy Carlson of Port Elgin
OPP. "As far as what's being done with the animal, at this point it's up to the
family."
Norman Buwalda, a businessman from Southwold Township, near London, died
yesterday at approximately 3 p.m. when he entered the cage to feed the tiger,
one of many exotic animals on his property. A male family member found Mr.
Buwalda, 66, in the cage and separated the 650-pound animal by trapping it
behind a set of glass doors that divides the cage. Reached yesterday at Mr.
Buwalda's home, a family member said the family had no comment.
Neighbours paint a picture of an introverted man who cared for his tigers, lions
and panthers as though they were his friends. David Rawson, whose property
touches Mr. Buwalda's, said his neighbour kept exotic pets as a hobby. He cared
for many large cats in the twelve years Mr. Rawson lived in the area, whose
growls were audible at night from Mr. Rawson's land. He usually kept between two
or three at a time.
"I've seen a panther, a cougar and a tiger," he said. "It's a very nice property
and very private. I think he would say that his friends were animals. I don't
think he felt he had a bond with humanity."
Mr. Rawson said the cage in which Mr. Buwalda kept the tiger was of "zoo
quality" and he had no safety concerns as long as the animals were kept in their
pens. The two-storey cage, made of concrete, glass and steel bars, is as big as
a house, he said. The rest of Mr. Buwalda's land was not fenced in. "I had no
serious concerns about my safety at anytime unless it would be released," he
said. "This was a totally unfenced property and should that tiger have gotten
away after he mauled the boy, what would have stopped him from galloping into
the woods?"
Mr. Buwalda's 80-acre property contained two cages, as well as a large stone
house standing at nearly 10,000 square feet on a landscaped lawn protected by a
security gate. "It would be considered to be a significant residential estate in
this area," he said. The tiger is still in its enclosure on the property. Const.
Carlson said police believe Mr. Buwalda kept the animals there legally but an
investigation is ongoing. "It's somewhat different than a dog that bites
somebody," Const. Carlson said. "What would you do with the animal if somebody
went into a cage at the zoo and got mauled? Would you put the tiger down? No."
The tiger living on the property, which police believe, mauled a 10-year-old
Toronto boy in June of 2004, igniting a heated discussion in Southwold Township
on whether exotic animals should be banned from the area. The boy and his family
were visiting Mr. Buwalda's residence when Mr. Buwalda led the tiger out of the
cage to allow the boy and his younger siblings to take photos of the animal. The
tiger was on a leash but lunged forward, knocking its owner off balance. No
charges were laid in the incident. Residents were furious when the town lost a
court case that would have seen Mr. Buwalda's exotic animals banned. Mr. Rawson
said Mr. Buwalda had been injured by his own animals in the past.
A post-mortem is scheduled for today, police said.
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