<p>Police have warned the public to stay indoors on the south-western edge of Berlin while they search for a wild animal in the area believed to be an escaped lion.</p>.<p>A police operation began overnight with two helicopters deployed and was expanded in the early hours of Thursday as a hundred officers hunted for the animal, said a police spokesperson in Brandenburg, the sparsely populated state surrounding the German capital.</p>.<p>"We are currently working on the assumption that the animal is a lioness," the spokesperson told <em>Reuters </em>via telephone.</p>.<p>The search area currently covers the Brandenburg municipalities of Kleinmachnow and Stahnsdorf.</p>.<p>Earlier Thursday, Berlin police had tweeted that the area on high alert included the capital's southern edge.</p>.<p>Germany's federal office for civil protection issued a warning to locals, also advising them to keep any pets indoors.</p>.<p>Asked where the wild animal may have come from, the police spokesperson said it was not clear. He said there were a number of facilities in the area that could keep a lion, such as zoos and a circus, but that none of these places had reported a missing animal. </p>
<p>Police have warned the public to stay indoors on the south-western edge of Berlin while they search for a wild animal in the area believed to be an escaped lion.</p>.<p>A police operation began overnight with two helicopters deployed and was expanded in the early hours of Thursday as a hundred officers hunted for the animal, said a police spokesperson in Brandenburg, the sparsely populated state surrounding the German capital.</p>.<p>"We are currently working on the assumption that the animal is a lioness," the spokesperson told <em>Reuters </em>via telephone.</p>.<p>The search area currently covers the Brandenburg municipalities of Kleinmachnow and Stahnsdorf.</p>.<p>Earlier Thursday, Berlin police had tweeted that the area on high alert included the capital's southern edge.</p>.<p>Germany's federal office for civil protection issued a warning to locals, also advising them to keep any pets indoors.</p>.<p>Asked where the wild animal may have come from, the police spokesperson said it was not clear. He said there were a number of facilities in the area that could keep a lion, such as zoos and a circus, but that none of these places had reported a missing animal. </p>