An Australian politician received a roo’d shock when he was attacked by a kangaroo while on a morning run in the country’s capital of Canberra.
Shane Rattenbury, a member in the Australian Capital Territory government, was left with scratches on one leg and bruises on the other after his run-in with the bounding marsupial.
"I'm not sure who got the bigger shock, me or the kangaroo," Rattenbury said.
"He was minding his own business eating some grass, I was minding my own business running” through the inner-northern suburb of Ainslie.
"Unfortunately the kangaroo jumped up, as they do when they're a bit startled, and took a defensive pose and unfortunately I came out of it second best with some decent cuts down the back of my leg."
A Good Samaritan drove the injured Rattenbury to a nearby hospital where a nurse cleaned his wounds and gave him a tetanus shot. A few hours later he arrived for work at parliament house.
He later joked on Twitter that he had been robbed by a kangaroo.
The Australian ABC reported, tongue in cheek, that a search for the kangaroo had “turned up several thousand possible culprits.”
There are an estimated 60 million kangaroos in Australia – nearly three times the human population – according to the Wildlife Preservation Society of Australia.
Attacks on humans are not common – but they do happen.
In 2012, a Queensland man was lucky to survive after a kangaroo kicked him in the stomach while he was jogging in a paddock. He punched the roo in the face and ran for his life.
Our coverage reaches millions each week, but only a small fraction of listeners contribute to sustain our program. We still need 224 more people to donate $100 or $10/monthly to unlock our $67,000 match. Will you help us get there today?