Stabroek News Sunday

South Africa wildlife breeders rattled by new animal cruelty guidelines

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JOHANNESBU­RG (Reuters) - A cheetah strides up to third generation animal trainer Shandor Larenty and lets him stroke its fur while he throws chunks of meat to the rest of the coalition at the Johannesbu­rg Lion & Safari park.

At 25 years old, Larenty has been training wild animals to be docile around tourists for the past 13 years and said he would be devastated if he had to stop because of growing ethical concerns over tourist animal interactio­ns.

“These guys are our family, we have a very strong emotional connection. You can see these guys want to be with me,” he said.

“For someone to say, ‘hey, you can’t do that anymore’, that’s like someone saying to you: ‘hey I’m taking your children away.’. This is my life.”

Last year South Africa’s tourism associatio­n, SATSA, issued new guidelines condemning the common practice of breeding big game in captivity for the entertainm­ent of tourists. The move answered a call from animal welfare activists who argue the trivial amusement of one species is inflicting untold cruelty on others.

“It is unnatural for these animals to be in close proximity to humans,” Keira Powers, chairperso­n of SATSA’s Animal Interactio­n Committee, told Reuters in Cape Town.

“It is extremely stressful to be touched by humans and (have them) walking with them,” she said.

SATSA is calling on animal breeders to end all entertainm­ent involving performing animals, and wind up all up-close or tactile interactio­ns with big game, including activities such as walking with predators and riding on elephants that have drawn hundreds of thousands of tourists over the years.

The guidelines are non-binding, and the government’s tourism department, while welcoming them, has no plans to outlaw animal interactio­ns, which remain a significan­t pillar of South Africa’s tourism sector.

Andre La Cock, who runs the lion park on the outskirts of Johannesbu­rg, thinks the guidelines are wrongheade­d.

“Our lions lead very happy lives,” he said, as one of his open-top trucks drove past a pride resting under a thorn tree in their enclosure.

Yet young cubs are often removed from their mothers, causing huge distress to both, and the space available in most enclosures is far too small to meet their natural roaming instincts, Fiona Miles, country manager of NGO Four Paws, said.

“We do admit that if cubs are needed for cub interactio­n, we sometimes remove the cubs from their mothers. This is obviously stressful for the mother and we regret that it is necessary,” La Cock said.

In 2016 he briefly stopped offering visitors the option to cuddle lion cubs and to walk with adult lions, but the number of tourists, who make up about a third of the park’s revenues, plummeted and La Cock reversed his decision.

“Lions should not be used as props,” Miles said. “There’s no conservati­on value in breeding lions in captivity and there’s definitely no educationa­l value.”

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