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Mexico says it’s closing in on tiger that escaped a month ago

Picture taken on May 29, 2015 of tiger Ankor, who escaped from a cage of Paradise of Mangroves unit of environmental management (UMA) In Coyuca de Benitez, Guerrero state, Mexico on October 27, 2015. Pedro PARDO/AFP/Getty Images

MEXICO CITY – A tiger named “Ankor” marked a full month on the run Wednesday, having evaded capture since he escaped from a restaurant zoo and disappeared into what appears to be a very tiger-friendly habitat on Mexico’s southern Pacific coast.

Mexican authorities have mounted a full-scale search effort including police, soldiers and a group of 10 big-cat experts.

They are looking in an area of low woods dotted with marshes, reeds and stands of button mangrove west of the resort of Acapulco.

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The country’s environmental protection agency said Wednesday it had identified the area where Ankor has taken up residence and had photographed him alive, apparently by using remote trip-wire cameras.

The agency said it expected to capture the animal “in the next few days” and relocate him to a safe place.

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Officials have been making similar claims since the male tiger escaped from the Mangrove Paradise zoo and restaurant area Oct. 26.

The week he escaped, the owner of a ranch about a mile (two kilometres) from the restaurant found five of his cows dead, and the tiger is suspected in that case.

The environmental agency issued a statement saying it “recommends that the population not approach” the area “given the dangerousness of this Bengal tiger.”

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