WATCH: Man attacked by wild boar on his way to work

Picture: Twitter

Picture: Twitter

Published Nov 8, 2018

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Tokyo - A Japanese office worker was charged, butted and bitten by a wild boar while on his way to his local train station.

Japanese media said the 48-year-old salaryman was walking to Imajuku Station in the suburbs of the city of Fukuoka at 7 a.m. on October. 26 when the boar suddenly charged him from an alley.

The incident was caught on a video that has since gone viral. The video, posted on Twitter, by @Koki915N, has already been viewed more than 3 million times.

Local media said the train station is around half a mile from the mountains and the boar is believed to have wandered into town from the foothills. After running into a dead-end between a pharmacy and a chain-link fence, the animal made a dash for freedom, upending the commuter, before biting him, goring him with its tusks and even going after his briefcase.

Two passing cars honked their horns in hopes of frightening the animal away.

先日のイノシシ襲撃事件。

ほんと痛そう、、、。😭 pic.twitter.com/JAmzsFbiKe

— 長坂 幸樹 (@Koki915N) November 4, 2018

The man was taken to hospital where he was treated for wounds on both legs, including a gash on his left thigh that needed eight stitches and one on his right knee that needed five stitches, the daily Mainichi Shimbun reported.

The boar was spotted later that day near the coast and killed by members of a local hunting club.

Only days after that attack, a man on a motorbike collided with a boar at night at Kyushu University in Fukuoka, breaking bones in four fingers.

Fukuoka Prefecture suffers considerable crop damage due to wild boars, and the local government is working with local hunters to cull 1 500 boars a year, but usually falls short of that target due to budget restrictions and a lack of hunters.

But when Japanese media reported that two boars had fallen into a dry reservoir in Kitakyushu in the same prefecture last month, the local government was surprised to be inundated with hundreds of calls asking for them to be rescued rather than killed. The boars were duly rescued and released back into the wild.

The Washington Post

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