The Star Malaysia

Same ending

Son of Cecil the lion killed by hunter in Zimbabwe.

-

JOHANNESBU­RG: A trophy hunter in Zimbabwe has shot dead a cub of Cecil the lion, whose death in 2015 caused worldwide outrage, researcher­s tracking the pride confirmed.

Xanda, a six-year-old lion fitted with a radio collar, was killed on July 7 in northwest Zimbabwe, close to where US dentist Walter Palmer shot Cecil with a high-powered bow and arrow two years ago.

“Xanda was shot by a trophy hunter on a legally sanctioned hunt in a hunting area outside Hwange National Park,” said Andrew Loveridge from Oxford University’s zoology department.

“As researcher­s we are saddened to lose a well-known study animal we have monitored since birth.”

In 2015, Cecil’s killing triggered fierce controvers­y as he was a popular attraction for visitors to the famed Hwange National Park.

Both Cecil and Xanda wore electronic GPS tracking collars in a project run by Oxford University’s wildlife conservati­on research unit.

But they had strayed out of the park boundaries and into a legal hunting area.

The trophy hunter has not been named, but many hunters are from the United States or South Africa, paying thousands of dollars for the opportunit­y to kill lions and other wild animals.

Pro-hunt groups say hunting provides an essential economic incentive to promote longterm conservati­on and that the income pays to safeguard wildlife and catch poachers.

Britain’s Daily Telegraph newspaper named the hunt’s profession­al expedition leader as Zimbabwean Richard Cooke, and said that the hunt was legal as Xanda was six years old.

It added that Cooke had handed in the collar after discoverin­g it on the dead animal, who was the head of the pride with two lionesses and several cubs.

Palmer, who shot Cecil, a 13-year-old male, was hounded on social media and went into hiding after demonstrat­ions outside his dental practice.

He was reported to have paid US$55,000 (RM236,500) for the hunt.

No charges were brought against Palmer or the local guide as the hunt was also found to be legal.

Scientists, who say that Hwange has a healthy population of about 550 lions, are pushing for a 5km hunting exclusion zone to protect lions who wander outside the park’s boundaries.

Cecil had at least 12 surviving cubs last year, according to the Oxford research project. — AFP

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia