CNN  , — ,
A remote Australian community has retaliated against a massive saltwater crocodile by eating the 3. 6 meter ( 11.8 meter ) beast that is responsible for chasing children and devouring pets.
On Wednesday, authorities in the city of Bulla in Australia’s Northern Territory shot the snake after deeming it a” considerable risk to the neighborhood”.

The monster “had been stalking and lunging at children and adults,” according to Northern Territory Police in a speech, and he “had also apparently taken several neighborhood dogs.”
The snake was “prepared for a dinner in the classic manner,” according to the police, but not before authorities took the opportunity to provide local children an unexpected” reptile safety session,” which included an “up- near look at the dangers within our waterways.”
Northern Territory Police Sergeant Andrew McBride told ABC that the dog was” cooked up into turtle neck soup, he was on the picnic, a few of the items were wrapped up in banana leaf and cooked subsurface.”
Sergeant McBride remarked,” There were a dozen full bellies and it was a rather big traditional feast.”
In Australia, where hunting the creatures has been prohibited by federal rules since 1971, when hunting had almost brought them close to extinction, both the salt and water turtle species are protected.
Statistics have boomed in the years since, with the Northern Territory today house to some 100, 000 alligators, according to the local authorities.
The northeast of Queensland and Western Australia are home to dozens more turtles than the state of Queensland.
Government animals specialist Kristen Hay, who uses a common name for the Northern Territory, warned that “any body of water in The Top End does have huge and possibly dangerous crocodiles.”
The state’s website notes that salt alligators can grow to six feet ( 20 feet ), weigh up to a lot and” will eat simply about anything”.
That means that crocodile and human interactions can be dangerous, and park rangers in northern Australia remove hundreds of crocodiles from populated areas every year.
A 16-year-old boy was killed by a snake in north Queensland in April while attempting to swim to shore after his ship broke down. Last month, the remains of a 64- yr- old fisherman were recovered from inside a crocodile, even in Queensland.
After being hospitalized with “puncture scars,” a nine-year-old boy was fortunate to live a reptile assault in the Northern Territory’s Kakadu National Park in January.