Sunday Times

Fury Over Lion Kill By ’Hardcore Huntress’

’Hardcore huntress’ target of fury after Limpopo lion hunt

-

US television presenter Melissa Bachman prompted outrage this week after boasting online that she had killed a lion at the Maroi Conservanc­y in Limpopo. The furious reaction to her posts led her to deactivate her Facebook and Twitter pages within hours.

A US television presenter prompted outrage this week after boasting online that she had killed a lion in South Africa.

Melissa Bachman, a keen hunter who produces programmes on the American outdoors, posted a photograph on Facebook and Twitter of herself holding a rifle and smiling beside the carcass of a male lion.

“Incredible day in South Africa,” the self-styled “hardcore huntress” said of her pursuits at the Maroi Conservanc­y in Limpopo, adding: “Stalked inside 60 yards [54m] on this beautiful male lion — what a hunt!”

Maroi is situated in the Limpopo Valley and caters for the hunting of wild animals on 8 500ha.

Lourens Mostert, the game farm manager at the conservanc­y where the hunt took place, said: “If it isn’t right to hunt these lions, why does our government legally give us permission?”

But the furious online reaction led Bachman to deactivate her Facebook and Twitter pages within hours. It also prompted an online petition asking the South African government to bar her from returning.

“She is an absolute contra- diction to the culture of conservati­on this country prides itself on,” said Elan Burman of Cape Town, the author of the petition, which quickly gathered 3 000 signatures.

“You, lady, are what is wrong with the world,” said Richard Robinson of Maryland in the US, who was among the signatorie­s. “Take with no consequenc­es. Shoot, kill, consume, destroy.

“You didn’t kill a lion, you stood behind a machine and pulled a little trigger, you pathetic, sad excuse of a human.”

Although African lions are

You, lady, are what is wrong with the world

rated “vulnerable” on the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature’s Red List, they are not officially endangered and hunting them is legal in a number of countries, including South Africa. “The main threats to lions are indiscrimi­nate killing,” said the organisati­on.

The photograph was in keeping with Bachman’s past ac- tivities. Her website displays pictures of her posing beside dead alligators, turkeys and bears, among other quarry.

She was axed as a contestant on the National Geographic programme Ultimate Survival Alaska last year after 13 000 people signed a petition protesting against the inclusion of a “heartless trophy hunter”.

Bachman could not be contacted for comment.

A recent study led by a scientist from Duke University in the US shows that as few as 32 000 lions are left in the wild, which makes hunting a con- troversial issue, particular­ly in Africa. Supporters say that it brings in money to local communitie­s and can help to reduce illegal poaching, but critics say it is a cruel practice that brings in little revenue to local people. Last year, Botswana banned all commercial hunting of wild animals and Zambia outlawed all hunting of lions and leopards from January.

“Tourists come to Zambia to see the lion, and if we lose the lion we will be killing our tourism industry,” said Tourism Minister Sylvia Masebo.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? LIKE SHOOTING FISH IN A BARREL: US television presenter Melissa Bachman with the carcasses of five alligators she killed
LIKE SHOOTING FISH IN A BARREL: US television presenter Melissa Bachman with the carcasses of five alligators she killed
 ??  ?? TO DIE FOR: Bachman poses with the body of a bear brought down in a crossbow hunt
TO DIE FOR: Bachman poses with the body of a bear brought down in a crossbow hunt

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa