A bear described by authorities as ‘extremely intelligent’ is on the loose in Japan, having injured four people in a series of attacks that have left a community on edge. The animal, which has evaded capture since early this week, has become a symbol of a deeper cultural shift: the encroachment of wilderness into human territory, and the unsettling realisation that we are not always the smartest creatures in the room.
For the residents of the small town in Hokkaido, this is more than a wildlife incident. It is a reminder that the boundaries we draw between civilisation and nature are fragile. The bear, identified as a brown bear known locally as ‘OSO-18’, has been described by wildlife officials as unusually cunning, capable of avoiding traps and changing its patterns to outsmart hunters. It has even been seen peering into windows, a gesture that feels less like curiosity and more like assessment.
The four victims, all middle-aged or elderly, were attacked while going about their daily routines: walking a dog, tending a garden, cycling home from work. The randomness of the attacks has bred a particular kind of fear. This is not a bear driven by hunger or desperation, but one that seems to be making choices. And that is what unsettles us most: the possibility that an animal might be reflecting back at us our own capacity for calculation.
Socially, the incident has reignited a debate about rural depopulation and rewilding. As Japan’s countryside empties, bears and other animals are reclaiming territory. Younger generations prefer city life, leaving behind an ageing population that is less able to defend itself. The bear’s intelligence may be a natural adaptation, but it also highlights a human failing: we have left a vacuum, and nature is filling it.
There is also a class dimension, as with all things in Japan. Wealthier communities can afford electric fences and regular patrols. Poorer, remote villages rely on the kindness of neighbours and the hope that the bear will move on. The OSO-18 attacks have struck hardest at those with the fewest resources, a pattern that will be familiar to readers of this column.
What happens next? The bear will likely be killed, not captured, because the risk to human life is now deemed too high. But its legacy will be a sharper awareness of the cost of our own retreat from the land. We have built a world that excludes the wild, only to find the wild is smarter than we gave it credit for.
For now, the people of Hokkaido lock their doors at dusk. They listen for the sound of heavy breathing outside their windows. And they wonder: is this the new normal? Or is this bear simply a harbinger of a more equal relationship with the natural world? In that sense, the ‘extremely intelligent’ bear is not just a menace. It is a mirror.










