Lions generate tourist income for Kenya's 
safari industry but about 100 of the animals are thought to die in the 
country each year 
Six lions have been killed on the outskirts of Nairobi after they strayed into a residential area of the Kenyan capital and were hunted down by locals.
Six lions have been killed on the outskirts of Nairobi after they strayed into a residential area of the Kenyan capital and were hunted down by locals.
Locals, apparently angry and anxious after the lions had killed a number of domestic goats, speared them to death. 
The animals, who were killed at night, strayed from Nairobi's national park.
About 2,000 lions remain in the country and the Kenya 
Wildlife Service (KWS) says it is losing the animals at a rate of around
 100 each year.
Some are dying due to destruction of habitat and others have been killed by disease.
Conflict caused by an encroaching human population has also contributed to Kenya's decreasing lion population. 
In the case of the Nairobi 
killings, KWS said it had tried unsuccessfully to catch the animals and 
dissuade locals from taking matters into their own hands. 
The service, the country's wildlife custodians, despatched 
rangers and vets in a bid to capture the two adult lionesses, two 
juveniles and two cubs. 
However, local residents apparently gathered after the lions 
killed four goats in a small farmstead on the outskirts of the capital. 
Livestock keeper Francis Kasha told the Reuters news agency the lions had come in the early hours of Wednesday. 
"We gathered as we waited for KWS officials to come and catch the lions. 
"We tried to surround the animals as we waited for the 
officials but some people became too rowdy and it was impossible to stop
 them from killing the lions."
Mr Kasha, who said the killing of some of his own goats had 
left him feeling bitter, went on: "I did not kill any lions then, but 
right now we have been forced to kill the lions and we are feeling very 
bad because this is national heritage and a source of income for our 
country." 
Reuters described the residents involved as being mainly Maasai pastoralists.
Nairobi's national park, from which the animals strayed, is surrounded on three sides by Kenya's capital city. 
In May, rangers were forced to shoot a lioness after it stalked an upmarket Nairobi neighbourhood for months.
Source BBC News 

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