The Scotsman

Lioness that killed woman looked after by ‘lion whisperer’

- By CHRISTOPHE­R TORCHIA

A lion that mauled a young woman to death in South Africa was under the care of a man known as the “lion whisperer” for his close interactio­ns with the predators.

Kevin Richardson, who keeps lions at his animal sanctuary in the Dinokeng Game Reserve, said on Facebook that he and an “experience­d” colleague took three lions for a walk in the reserve on Tuesday and that one chased an impala, eventually encounteri­ng the 22-year-old woman at least 1.2 miles away.

Richardson said he followed procedure before the weekly excursion by assessing the area for other “big five” animals, a designatio­n that includes rhino, elephant, buffalo, leopard and lion, and sending out a “notificati­on” that he was walking with lions.

The woman died at a tented camp run by Richardson, who said he was “devastated” by the killing.

“The young woman was not a guest at the camp, but had accompanie­d her friend to conduct an interview for an assignment with the camp’s manager,” he said. “Before leaving the reserve, the two visitors were taking photograph­s outside the camp where the attack occurred.”

A police investigat­ion was under way. The victim had joined a friend who went to the camp for a “school project,” said spokeswoma­n Constable Connie Moganedi. “When they were about to leave, the lioness attacked the young lady.”

The victim’s family is “traumatise­d,” said Moganedi, who declined to provide details about the victim.

The “intimate glam camp” with five tents is an hour’s drive from Johannesbu­rg’s main internatio­nal airport, according to Richardson’s website.

The management of the Dinokeng reserve said the woman was killed “within a conservati­on section that is not accessible to the general public” but lies within the reserve’s boundaries.

“The lion that was involved with this fatality was not one of the wild free-roaming lions of the Dinokeng Game Reserve,” the management said.

Some conservati­onists say captive-bred lions lose their fear of people and should not be released into the wild, partly because they pose a heightened threat to humans.

In an interview last year, Richardson said he does not breed lions and that those on his 1,300-hectare property feed on donated carcasses of cattle and antelope. He said he hoped his hands-on interactio­n with lions, including caressing and cavorting, would help to highlight the plight of Africa’s wild lions. Their numbers have plummeted over several decades.

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