National Post

Cecil the lion

Zimbabwe won’t charge U.S. dentist in killing.

- By Lindsey Bever

WASHINGTON • Authoritie­s in Zimbabwe have decided not to charge the American dentist who hunted and killed one of Africa’s most beloved lions, saying Walter Palmer went through proper channels before he set out on the savanna with a bow and arrow.

Palmer sparked internatio­nal outrage over the summer after he killed the 13-yearold black-maned beauty Cecil the lion. Some called Palmer a monster. Others called him a murderer. The uproar all but forced him undergroun­d.

But a cabinet minister said Monday in Zimbabwe that Palmer had obtained the legal authority to do it.

“We approached the police and then the prosecutor general, and it turned out that Palmer came to Zimbabwe because all the papers were in order,” Environmen­t Minister Oppah Muchinguri-Kashiri said, according to Agence France-Presse.

“The documents were there. The problem now remains internal. ... We are now going to review how we issue hunting quotas.”

A spokesman for Palmer told the Minneapoli­s Star Tribune that he had no comment.

Palmer, a big-game hunter from Bloomingto­n, Minn., was identified as Cecil’s killer in July. Authoritie­s said he had paid about US$50,000 for the African safari in which he lured the lion from his home in the Hwange National Park, hunted him and killed him.

Zimbabwean authoritie­s called for his extraditio­n.

Palmer apologized, claiming he thought the hunt was legal. He said he had relied on his hunting guide, Theo Bronkhorst, and a local prop- erty owner, Honest Ndlovu. Bronkhorst, was charged with “failure to prevent an illegal hunt.” Ndlovu was charged for allowing the men to hunt the lion on his land without getting authorizat­ion.

The minister said this week that Ndlovu did not have a hunting quota but the district council over his land did.

After he was identified as Cecil’s killer, Palmer said his life was threatened. He temporaril­y shut down his dental practice, River Bluff Dental, where protesters put up memorials with stuffed lions to represent the one he took.

He came forward last month, telling The Associated Press and the Star Tribune in a joint interview that he did, in fact, kill Cecil, but echoing his previous statement that he did not know the lion was important to the country.

“It’s been especially hard on my wife and daughter,” Palmer said. “They’ve been threatened. In the media, as well, and the social media. … I don’t understand that level of humanity, to come after people not involved at all.”

Palmer returned to work without further comment.

Muchinguri-Kashiri said Zimbabwe would be happy to have Palmer back — but “not for hunting.”

 ?? Jim Mone /the asociated pres ?? U.S. dentist Walter Palmer arrives back at his office following a lunch break in Bloomingto­n, Minn., in September. Following the July controvers­y over his shooting of a lion in Zimbabwe, officials now say all his papers were in order.
Jim Mone /the asociated pres U.S. dentist Walter Palmer arrives back at his office following a lunch break in Bloomingto­n, Minn., in September. Following the July controvers­y over his shooting of a lion in Zimbabwe, officials now say all his papers were in order.
 ?? ZIMBABWE NATIONAL PARKS ?? U.S. dentist Walter Palmer and his family were threatened after he shot Cecil the
lion, seen above in 2012.
ZIMBABWE NATIONAL PARKS U.S. dentist Walter Palmer and his family were threatened after he shot Cecil the lion, seen above in 2012.

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