Animal rights activists have called on the Philippines government to free what is believed to be the largest crocodile world from captivity. The 6.4 meter male saltwater crocodile is accused of killing two people and was captured last week. The government then placed the animal in a fenced-in pond after it was captured, and officials are hoping to make the animal a tourist attraction. But local and international animal rights advocates are angry over what they call blatant animal cruelty and abuse. Maria, a 24-year-old Manila-based activist, told Bikyamasr.com that the treatment of the crocodile is “unacceptable.” She argued that “the government should release the animal back into the wild where it belongs and stop the horrific idea that they can cage the animal, who did nothing wrong except be a crocodile.” Maria said it was unfortunate that people were killed, but the reality, she said, “was this is the world we live in. “As human habitat encroaches on wildlife's areas, we are likely to see more death because there is no where for the animals to go and this is not their fault,” she added. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) senior Asia-Pacific campaigner Ashley Fruno on Saturday agreed that the reptile was better off being returned to the wild, away from human settlements. “[The government] should do the compassionate thing and order this crocodile to be returned to his natural habitat, as taking him away to be locked up in an animal prison is just plain wrong,” she wrote. Animals kept in cages are prone to psychotic behavior and its immense size and power could prove dangerous to visitors and those caring for it, she warned. “While even those zoos with the best intentions can never replicate the natural environment of animals, how do they expect to come remotely close with a crocodile roughly two or three times the size of a regular adult?” BM