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Paris chainsaw thief hacks off Sun King elephant tusk at Natural History Museum |
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A security guard at the Natural History museum stands in front of the elephant skeleton whose tusk was chopped off by a thief, at the Natural History museum in Paris on March 30, 2013. A young man was arrested by the police on the night of 29-30 March after attempting to steal the tusks of an elephant having belonged to Louis XIV by using a chainsaw to chop them off, according to the Higher Education and Research Ministry. AFP PHOTO/ JOEL SAGET.
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PARIS (AFP).- A man broke into the Paris natural history museum early Saturday and used a chainsaw to hack off the tusk of an elephant that belonged to King Louis XIV of France, officials said.
Police arrested the man in a nearby street as he was making his escape and recovered the three-kilogram (seven-pound) tusk, museum workers said.
The elephant whose skeleton is preserved in the popular museum was given as a gift in 1668 by the king of Portugal to Louis XIV, who was also known as the Sun King.
The animal's tusks are not the original ones but were added to the skeleton in the 19th century.
Police made no immediate comment about why the man tried to steal the tusk but the incident comes amid a series of thefts in recent years of ivory from European museums and zoos.
The international trade in elephant ivory, with rare exceptions, has been outlawed since 1989 after elephant populations in Africa dropped from millions in the mid-20th century to some 600,000 by the end of the 1980s.
Yet poachers continue to slaughter elephants to lay their hands on their precious ivory and the illegal trade in the white gold continues to boom.
© 1994-2013 Agence France-Presse
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