iWon - News Rat-Trap Nets Fisherman
Apr 10, 9:55 am ET
PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - A Cambodian who set out to catch fish with car batteries and electrodes got a taste of his own medicine when he stepped on an electric rat-trap and died.
The Kampuchea Thmey newspaper said on Thursday that fisherman Roeun Bo, 36, died instantly when he stumbled into a mesh of bare wires hooked up to a large truck battery.
He had been on his way to fish illegally in the middle of the night in a stream near his home in Takeo, around 40 miles south of the capital Phnom Penh, the paper said.
Rat-traps using electricity or glue are common around rice fields in the impoverished southeast Asian nation. Once caught, the rats are sold for around $1 each for food.
"This business now appears to be dangerous. Not only does it kill wildlife -- it also kills human beings," one police official said.
Apr 10, 9:55 am ET
PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - A Cambodian who set out to catch fish with car batteries and electrodes got a taste of his own medicine when he stepped on an electric rat-trap and died.
The Kampuchea Thmey newspaper said on Thursday that fisherman Roeun Bo, 36, died instantly when he stumbled into a mesh of bare wires hooked up to a large truck battery.
He had been on his way to fish illegally in the middle of the night in a stream near his home in Takeo, around 40 miles south of the capital Phnom Penh, the paper said.
Rat-traps using electricity or glue are common around rice fields in the impoverished southeast Asian nation. Once caught, the rats are sold for around $1 each for food.
"This business now appears to be dangerous. Not only does it kill wildlife -- it also kills human beings," one police official said.
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