Sunday News

Lion Man faces abuse claims

Reality TV star denies accusation­s from coworker he abused animals in Africa, writes John Weekes.

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‘ He was on the phone telling the whole world he’s got himself a giraffe.’ FRANSISCO GARCIA

LION Man Craig Busch has been accused of kidnapping a newborn giraffe from its mother, before it was even able to stand on its own.

South African current affairs show Carte Blanche has screened photos of him taking the giraffe into captivity. But Craig Busch denied abusing animals, saying he was ‘‘sick of smear campaigns’’.

Fransisco Garcia – a worker at Busch’s Jabula Big Cat Sanctuary near Rustenburg, South Africa – took photos as the baby animal, named Zenda, was unloaded from a trailer.

‘‘Craig was all excited, arranged for the trailer, went to fetch the creature, brought it there to his house and he still said to me if anybody asks about the giraffe just tell them that the mother pushed it away,’’ he told the programme.

‘‘And then immediatel­y after that, he was on the phone telling the whole world he’s got himself a giraffe. I thought it’s not right. It’s not right taking an animal from its mother.’’

A source, not named by Carte Blanche, told the program Busch nearly killed Zenda while filming a segment for his show, which screens on Animal Planet.

In the segment, Busch tells the camera the animal is abandoned, and he is trying to save it to keep it safe.

The source said: ‘‘I thought Zenda on the lead was awful. They wanted to create catching a baby giraffe on film, so they dragged her down into the bush with the lead.’’

‘‘We spent about half a day doing this, Zenda always trying to run off – at one point she was getting so badly choked she dropped down to the ground, she wasn’t fit to raise her head. She was still breathing, but I thought she was a goner. I am sure so did everyone else. She had to rest for about an hour.’’

In a legal letter to the program, Busch’s lawyers said: ‘‘Our client would never abuse animals (kicking, etc) as such action would jeopardise his own safety.

‘‘Our client however denies he would place any of the animals under his care at risk, be it while filming or otherwise.’’

This week, Busch’s mother Patricia Bush – who is now estranged from her son after legal battles over Zion Wildlife Park in Whangarei – said she believed large animals should not live in captivity, but her son would not harm them.

Her son owed her ‘‘lots of money’’ and she didn’t believe he would ever ‘‘put things right,’’ she said. But she was sceptical about the fresh animal abuse claims.

‘‘When he was a child, he was very kind to domestic cats. He was a very gentle person, so all the things that have come out since have really surprised me.’’

Though the two seemed irreconcil­able, she still tried contacting her son, who seemed settled in South Africa.

‘‘I think he went over there pretty much on his own.’’

She said she ‘‘disillusio­ned’’ about Zion.

‘‘There’s a lot of things I feel disillusio­ned about. I can’t see the benefit of having any wild animal in the zoo any more.

‘‘All it’s really shown me is how greedy people can be.’’ was

 ??  ?? Craig Busch, aka the Lion Man, is alleged to have taken this baby giraffe from its mother and told people it had been abandoned.
Craig Busch, aka the Lion Man, is alleged to have taken this baby giraffe from its mother and told people it had been abandoned.

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