The Citizen (KZN)

SAFE LANDING

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more ground-breaking.

The National Council of SPCAs (NSPCA) has been fighting for some time for the lion bone trade to be abolished.

Last September, the NSPCA applied for an urgent interdict against the minister of environmen­tal affairs, the SA Predator Associatio­n and the MECs of economic developmen­t and environmen­t in Limpopo, North West, Gauteng and Free State in a bid to get it suspended.

For lion bone quotas to be confirmed, the decision must be made in accordance with the Scientific Authority and profession­al reviews of all available informatio­n. The public can submit informatio­n for considerat­ion by the Scientific Authority.

The NSPCA argued last year that as soon as it submitted a request for a review of 2017’s quota, the 2018 quota was announced and confirmed. This was while it had two legal processes in the pipeline.

It also argued that although the department said no wild lions were at risk, the Endangered Wildlife Trust highlighte­d that wild lions, especially in Mozambique, had come under increasing threat for their body parts, which the department downplayed.

The NSPCA argued in court the lion bone trade sees captive-bred lions at times kept in deplorable conditions. The judge criticised the state for this, adding that if SA pursued this trade, captive-bred animals had to live in legally specified conditions. If this did not occur, it sent the message that SA was open for business regardless of the conditions lions were in, which the judge said contravene­d “the spirit of the constituti­on”.

Minister of Environmen­tal Affairs Barbara Creecy has not yet set a quota for this year. – nicas@ citizen.co.za

 ?? Picture: EPA-EFE ?? Ali Sina, a member of the Afghanista­n Air-Federation, lands in the north of Kabul, Afghanista­n. Most paraglidin­g activities are kept in Kabul airspace due to security concerns.
Picture: EPA-EFE Ali Sina, a member of the Afghanista­n Air-Federation, lands in the north of Kabul, Afghanista­n. Most paraglidin­g activities are kept in Kabul airspace due to security concerns.

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