American student savaged by two chimpanzees

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[h1]Parents of American student savaged by two chimpanzees fly out to South Africa to visit their critically injured son[/h1]
  • Andrew Oberle, 26, was studying chimp behaviour at the Goodall Institute in South Africa
  • Paramedics had to waited for armed escorts before treating him
  • Mother says graduate student had long been devoted to chimpanzees
  • The case mirrors that of Charla Nash, 58, who was horrifically mauled by chimpa in 2009 and had to have a face transplant
By Laura Cox

PUBLISHED: 22:52 EST, 30 June 2012 | UPDATED: 08:34 EST, 1 July 2012


The uncle of an American graduate student mauled by chimpanzees at a South African sanctuary says the man's parents are flying from the U.S. to visit their critically injured son.

Carl Oberle of suburban St. Louis said his 26-year-old nephew, Andrew F. Oberle, remained hospitalized Saturday.

Officials say the University of Texas at San Antonio anthropology graduate student was badly injured Thursday when two chimpanzees pulled him under a fence while he was giving a lecture at the Jane Goodall Institute Chimpanzee Eden.

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Attack: Andrew Oberle, a University of Texas graduate student was savaged by two chimps while leading a group of tourists at the Jane Goodall Institute in South Africa

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Brutal: Andrew Oberle, was dragged more than a mile by the chimps

Carl Oberle described chimps as his nephew's 'passion' and says he knew each animal by its 'name and face.'

A conservationist who runs the sanctuary says investigators will have to wait until Oberle is well enough to provide details to try to determine what prompted the attack.

The University of Texas graduate student was left fighting for his life on Thursday after two chimpanzees pounced on him at the South African reserve where he was studying their behaviour, dragging him along the ground for more than a mile.

The mother of 26-year-old Andrew Oberle said that her son had been passionate about chimps since watching a documentary about famous naturalist Jane Goodall in seventh grade.

Mary Flint added that her son knew the risks involved in working with apes, and said that the attack would probably not stop him carrying out further research.

In a case that mirrors that of Charla Nash, a Connecticut woman, who in 2009 had her face ripped off by a 200-pound chimp, Mr Oberle suffered a ‘frenzied’ attack, in which he was bitten multiple times. 

The beasts, named Mickey and Amadeus, grabbed him by his feet and yanked him down the road, under a fence and into their enclosure at the Jane Goodall Institute Chimp Eden near Nelspruit, South Africa, where paramedics were forced to wait for armed escorts before they could go in and treat him.

Mr Oberle, an American researcher, was giving tourists a lecture at the sanctuary as part of his master's degree in Anthropology and Primatology, based at the University of Texas at San Antonio. 

He had crossed the first of two fences separating the chimpanzees from visitors and was standing close to the second fence, which is electrified, when the attack began.

The tourists were escorted to safety by staff members as the chimpanzees dragged Mr Oberle out of their enclosure. The sanctuary's director fired shots into the air to scare the chimps away from the man, before chasing the animals back into their enclosure. 

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Brutal: Stacey Johns (right) a friend of Oberle's on Facebook, was hit in the head by a rock launched by Cozy (left). 'Cozy may hit people in the head with rocks but it's not his fault' Oberle wrote on the site

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Calm before the storm: On Facebook these sleeping chimps (not the ones which attacked) are described as 'cute'

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Animal lover: In this undated photo Andrew Orbele poses one of his charges

Medics stabilised the graduate at the scene and he was taken by ambulance to a private hospital in Nelspruit. Beeld reported that he lost part of an ear and parts of his fingers.

'When we found him, he was in a foetal position underneath a lapa (a roofed, open-walled structure) with massive injuries, lacerations, abrasions, partial amputation from his head to toe,' Lloyd Krause, ER24 emergency service spokesman told the Herald Sun.

'He lost an ear, he lost a number of fingers and toes, he's got very deep wounds, he's got total removal of skin and muscle off his one leg and his one arm, fractures all over the place.'

On Oberle's Facebook page he is listed as being from Saint Louis, Missouri. He now lives in San Antonio, Texas, but has been in South Africa since May.

He recently posted photographs of the chimps he was working with on the website, tagged with comments such as 'so cute' beside a picture of two of them sleeping.

Another portrays a wide-mouthed chimp named Cozy, who suffered brain damage after being abused prior to his rescue. Oberle describes the primate as 'still the best', adding: 'Cozy may hit people in the head with rocks but it's not his fault'. 

One of Cozy's victims, Stacey Johns, is also pictured in the album with blood pouring from a wound in her head.

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Powerful beasts: Chimpanzees sit in an enclosure at the Chimp Eden rehabilitation center, near Nelspruit, South Africa

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Brutal: The 26-year-old was dragged for more than a mile by the chimps at the Goodall Institute Chimp Eden (pictured)

Oberle, apparently fascinated by the primates, was experimenting with different food types and on Monday wrote that they enjoyed an offering of oatmeal. Last Saturday he wrote that 'mustard was a big hit'.

The sanctuary opened six years ago and is home to rescued chimpanzees, many of which suffered horrific abuse, hunted for their meat or used in the entertainment industry or at roadside zoos. 

One adult male arrived almost completely shaven and dressed as a little boy, wearing a gold watch and carrying a suitcase of clothes, the center's website said.

David Oosthuizen, executive director, said in a statement: 'This is a terrible tragedy that should never happen. All our thoughts and prayers are with this young man and his family.'

He added that the chimps’ power makes them a force to be feared. They have six times the strength of a human being.

'Any interaction between humans and wild animals can be dangerous as wild animals are often very strong and can act aggressively if approached or if they feel threatened,' Oosthuizen said.

'Additionally, the chimpanzees at Chimp Eden have suffered horrible injuries and abuse from humans and therefore have to be treated with caution.'

The two chimpanzees were placed in their night enclosure after the attack and will be held there pending the investigation, after which they would be returned to their enclosure, said chairman Edwin Jay.

In a statement a spokesman from Oberle's university said: 'We were saddened to learn that one of our students, Andrew Oberle, sustained serious injuries as the result of a chimpanzee attack. Our hearts go out to Andrew and his family.'

In May Oberle was awarded in Geographic Information Science from UTSA. Prior to enrolling at the school he studied at St Mary's University in San Antonio.
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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...critically-injured-son.html?ito=feeds-newsxml

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Chimps are like 900 times stronger than Man I thought I read/heard before?
 
Originally Posted by Al Audi

Chimps are like 900 times stronger than Man I thought I read/heard before?


the article said 6 times but 900 times would damn near be super strength
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Originally Posted by Al Audi

Chimps are like 900 times stronger than Man I thought I read/heard before?


Man if they were 900 times stronger you think that lil bs metal fence could keep them inside
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And how my man said it won't the chimps fault the chick got hit in the head with the rock...he threw it right smh
 
You probably heard that they could LIFT 900lbs dead weight which I think is true.
 
Feel awful for the man, but that's the risk you take when working with WILD animals.
 
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Chimps are bout that life: premeditated murder, tortured, cannibalism, gang beatings. Their go-to move is ripping off testicles. 
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Why people continuously lower their guards around these animals is beyond me. 

Poor guy though 
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Originally Posted by Al Audi

Chimps are like 900 times stronger than Man I thought I read/heard before?

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Dude goes to my University. That's crazy.
 
Originally Posted by ThrowedInDaGame

Originally Posted by Al Audi

Chimps are like 900 times stronger than Man I thought I read/heard before?

you might as well have said 9,000



anyway, I believe they are 10 times stronger than the average man

Edit:

bakedFresh707 wrote:
damb imagine Vegeta readin the power levels of Chimps on his scanner. lol

Beat me to it
 
Originally Posted by RustyShackleford

30t6p3b.gif
Chimps are bout that life: premeditated murder, tortured, cannibalism, gang beatings. Their go-to move is ripping off testicles. 
laugh.gif
 
Why people continuously lower their guards around these animals is beyond me. 




Poor guy though 
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This smh...

It sounds like they toyed with the guy, just ripping him up.

  
 
Originally Posted by Al Audi

Chimps are like 900 times stronger than Man I thought I read/heard before?

900 times?  
It's even funnier that you have a TEAM FITNESS sig 
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A few of of my friends know him and told me about this a few days ago. It's crazy and I know he has a long road to recovery
 
Originally Posted by Hanacheezy

Originally Posted by Al Audi

Chimps are like 900 times stronger than Man I thought I read/heard before?


900 doe?
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 Chimps be bodying everyone and everything if they were that damn strong 
 
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