Sunday Times

Lions’ new home no safe haven for big cats

Six rescued lions have died — and funders are pulling the pride

- By BONGANI FUZILE

● After enduring years of cruelty in South American circuses, a group of 33 rescued lions moved into their new home in Limpopo two years ago to live out their lives in welldeserv­ed comfort.

But their peace has been short-lived.

The animals are at the centre of a bitter row between the internatio­nal animal rights group that rescued them and the owner of the sanctuary that looks after them.

The deaths of six of the lions at Emoya Big Cat Sanctuary in Vaalwater, Limpopo, prompted an investigat­ion by Animal Defenders Internatio­nal (ADI), which it said revealed “an ugly picture of mismanagem­ent, negligence, drunken rages, inappropri­ate associatio­ns and abuse of staff and volunteers, which put our lions at risk”.

The organisati­on says it no longer has faith in the sanctuary owners and that the surviving 27 lions will be moved to another, secret location in South Africa so they can receive better care.

But sanctuary owner Minunette Heuser said she was completely dedicated to the big cats and would never let them go. She said she would go to court to keep them.

“I don’t know what their fuss is. These lions are safe here and we are protecting them,” Heuser told the Sunday Times.

Less than a month after arriving in South African in 2016, two of the lions, Kala and Rapunzel, died after reportedly being fed botulism-infected giraffe meat.

In a letter to its members, ADI founders Jan Creamer and Tim Phillips claim Heuser received a free decaying giraffe carcass from a neighbour and fed it to the lions, despite that fact that ADI had provided money for food for three months.

“ADI transferre­d emergency funds of $5 000 to Emoya for veterinary care. The money was used for something else — we had to pay the vet again, direct,” they wrote.

In June last year, two other lions, José and Liso, were butchered by poachers.

“The external electric fence on the enclosure was inactive [and the] enclosure was . . . set back deep in the bush,” Creamer and Phillips write.

“ADI had repeatedly requested that Emoya increase security . . . but nothing was done. There were no guards. The police and our own investigat­ors informed us that ‘it was an inside job’. In our opinion, José and Liso died as a result of gross negligence on Emoya’s part.”

In August, another rescued lion died at the sanctuary “due to fighting”.

The latest death occurred on Christmas Day when one of the lions, Barbie, was apparently attacked by another lion.

Other allegation­s in the letter included:

● ADI sent $13 000 (about R170 000) to Emoya for tents for extra shelter, but the money was never paid to the supplier;

● Thereafter, ADI said it would only pay suppliers direct. Heuser claimed to have found first one, then another, commercial meat supplier but an investigat­ion revealed one was her boyfriend and the other her lawyer. The food bill has increased by 350%;

● ADI’s materials and labour were used to build an enclosure for lions coming from another organisati­on, which were not due to arrive for months; and

● Staff and volunteers raised concerns about Heuser’s drinking, drunken rages and racist behaviour.

Heuser, who runs the sanctuary with her daughter Savannah, told the Sunday Times they had made improvemen­ts, including installing a hi-tech security system.

“Yes, they [the lions] have died. That’s unfortunat­e and we are sad that they’ve died, they were close to our hearts,” she said.

When the Sunday Times drove around the sanctuary, the lions were in enclosures.

Heuser denied ADI had contribute­d R8.3million to the sanctuary, or that money for tents had not been paid to the supplier.

“We are doing this for the lions and we never take their money and use it for our own benefit,” she said.

Asked about claims that she had used her boyfriend and then her lawyer to supply meat, Heuser said: “I did discusss the meat with my attorney [and] . . . I was dating someone . . . who was supplying meat, but we were not an item . . .”

She denied that ADI material and labour had been used to build an enclosure for other cats and, while she admitted to enjoying a “glass of wine sometimes”, denied mistreatin­g staff.

“I would never hurt another person and strive to treat all people with respect.”

She said they would fight ADI.

“There’s no way that we will let go of these animals. If they are removing them, we are going to court.”

They really looked after each other. They loved to cuddle and always slept together Tim Phillips ADI vice-president, on Liso and José shortly after they were killed

 ?? Picture: Supplied ?? One of the 33 former circus lions at Emoya Big Cat Sanctuary, Vaalwater, in May 2016.
Picture: Supplied One of the 33 former circus lions at Emoya Big Cat Sanctuary, Vaalwater, in May 2016.
 ?? Picture: Thapelo Morebudi ?? Minunette Heuser, right, the owner of Emoya Sanctuary, and her daughter Savannah stand to lose the remaining 27 rescued lions.
Picture: Thapelo Morebudi Minunette Heuser, right, the owner of Emoya Sanctuary, and her daughter Savannah stand to lose the remaining 27 rescued lions.

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