Bears are rarely out of the headlines in Japan these days because they keep straying into urban areas. Attacks are rising, and a record 13 people have died this fiscal year alone.
A traditional-style inn had an uninvited guest on Friday in the northeastern prefecture of Yamagata. The bear wreaked havoc, damaging the interior and forcing the family owners to flee.
Sasaki Kazuo says he saw the animal earlier in the week and decided to close for winter earlier than planned. He said, "Bears have probably roamed near the inn before, but they never entered the building."
Local hunters shot the animal under an emergency order.
Communities across the region are worried. Some parents in Iwate Prefecture have asked school buses to drop their children off as close to home as possible.
Taxi and school bus operator Sugimoto Shutaro said, "Buses can't use narrow roads, so keeping children safe is a challenge."
The flurry of sightings and attacks has left many people wondering why. Experts say the bears are probably hungry, and leaving their natural habitat in search of something to eat.
Koike Shinsuke, a professor at Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, said, "They could be roaming a wider area because acorns, which are their main food source in autumn, may be in short supply along with other nuts too."
Officials at Japan's Forestry Agency take the same view. They say this year's crop of beech nuts in northeastern Japan has been extremely poor.
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