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Reports: Lions eat 'poacher', leaving just his head at South Africa park

The remains were found over the weekend in the bush at a private game park just outside the famed Kruger National Park, which lies in the far northeast of the country.
LIMPOPO, SOUTH AFRICA - JULY 21: A lion relaxes on the banks of the Luvuvhu river at the Pafuri game reserve on July 21, 2010 in Kruger National Park, South Africa. Kruger National Park is one of the largest game reserves in South Africa spanning 19,000 square kilometres and is part of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

A suspected poacher in South Africa was mauled to death and almost completely eaten by a pack of lions, according to multiple media reports.

The remains were found over the weekend in the bush at a private game park just outside the famed Kruger National Park, which lies in the far northeast of the country.

Officials found a rifle and ammunition next to the body, according to the local Eyewitness News website.

"It seems the victim was poaching in the game park when he was attacked and killed by lions. They ate his body, nearly all of it, and just left his head and some remains," police spokesman Moatshe Ngoepe said. Police are trying to establish the victim's identity.

"We are still trying all other means, including the Home Affairs Department, to get his history, which may lead us to his residential place," Ngoepe told the Sowetannewspaper.

"The process of identifying the deceased has already commenced and it might be made possible by the fact that his head is among the remains that were found at the scene."

Earlier, it was thought the dead man was a farmworker whose tractor had broken down, Eyewitness News reported. However, Ngoepe said that farmworker was found alive — his tractor did break down, but he managed to walk to safety.

The incident comes just months after a poacher was charged and severely injured by a rhino he was hunting for its horn in nearby Namibia. Lion and tiger bones and elephant and rhino horns are prized in Asia for their supposed restorative and virility powers.

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