A safari-park owner who once said he would rather be k!lled by an elephant than to shoot one was fatally trampled by an elephant at his South African wildlife reserve.
Gary Freeman, 65, an experienced safari tour guide, was leading a small group of tourists at Klaserie Private Nature Reserve in the Limpopo province on April 9 when the elephant suddenly charged at him, the Daily Mail reported.
“Gary tried to break the charge, but he never fired a shot. The elephant was very quickly on him, and it was, as you imagine, not pleasant,” a source said.
“There is nothing anyone can do to stop six tons of angry elephant. Fortunately, it was all over quickly,” the source said.
The four tourists on the tour helped get Freeman into a vehicle and “rushed him to try and get medical attention, but nothing could be done,” the source said.
“He had succumbed to his dreadful injuries,” the source said.
A previous visitor to the 148,000-acre park said Freeman had a deep connection to elephants.
“In the past, we have heard Gary speak of his deep respect and love for the elephants,” wrote Judy Connors of Johannesburg in a Facebook tribute.
“He said he would rather be k!lled by an elephant than shoot one. Perhaps this is what I want to believe, but there must have been a special bond, soul-to-soul, for this elephant to be the chosen one tasked with his deliverance,” Connors said.
Freeman graduated from college with a mechanical-engineering degree but became a ranger and ran the safari company he co-owned for 33 years.
He co-founded Klaserie in 1969, when 36 farm owners merged to create one of South Africa’s biggest Big Five game reserves.
Police in Limpopo have opened an inquest into what happened, and experts have been called in to assess whether the elephant is a threat to others.
Although elephant attacks are rare, between 300 and 600 people are k!lled by the animals annually, according to figures.
