Sunday Times

Reducing the king of the beasts to easy prey for ‘hunters’

Internatio­nal indignatio­n over the canned hunting of lions in SA is growing, writes

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LIONS are majestic animals, the alpha predators of the African bush. We think of them as roaming wild and free across the plains.

But this is far from the reality. South Africa has a population of about 2 750 lions in national and private game reserves — and almost twice that number caged in pens.

Since 2007 the conservati­on spotlight has been focused on rhino poaching. But looming as large is the intensive breeding of lions and other predators for the hunter’s bullet.

These animals are bred specifical­ly to be shot in relatively confined or enclosed areas with little to no chance of escape.

Canned hunting, or “captive hunting” as the breeders and hunters call it, is legal in South Africa.

“In this day and age, is it appropriat­e that we breed lions in cages and other confined enclosures so that people can shoot them for fun?” asked Ian Michler, who has been researchin­g and campaignin­g against these industries for over a decade.

When Michler started his research at the turn of this century, “there were 500 to 800 predators in cages in South Africa . . . in 2006 it was up to 3 500 and now there are anywhere between 6 000 to 8 000 predators in confinemen­t”. Most of these are lions. Pieter Potgieter, chairman of the South African Predator Associatio­n, said the breeding and hunting of captive-bred wildlife was acceptable, “an internatio­nal practice in line with the principle of sustainabl­e use of wildlife resources”.

According to Potgieter, about 200 individual­s and institutio­ns have permits to keep and breed lions in South Africa. About half of them are members of the predator associatio­n.

His views are supported by the Profession­al Hunters’ Associatio­n of South Africa.

“We have raised the bar higher than is needed,” Adri Kitshoff, CEO of the associatio­n, said in an April interview with Financial Mail. “Among standards set, a lion must be released at least seven days prior to a hunt in an enclosure of at least 1 000ha.”

In 2012, about 617 lions were hunted for trophy purposes, with fewer than 10 estimated to be lions in reserves, according to the Department of Environmen­tal Affairs.

Who is responsibl­e for regulating the shooting of lions? No one, it appears. The department has said that “the hunting of captive-bred lions relates to an ethical matter that does not fall within the legislativ­e mandate of the minister of environmen­tal affairs”.

Michler said: “Other than provincial fencing requiremen­ts, there seem to be no rules or regulation­s governing canned lion hunting.

LION DOWN: US TV personalit­y Melissa Bachman posted pictures of a lion she killed in South Africa on Facebook, sparking outrage

“That is why the government can wash its hands of it.”

Lions also don’t fall under the auspices of the SPCA, because they are not categorise­d as domestic animals.

“Everyone can exploit them,” said Michler.

The department tried to put

The fact that it’s actually legal here . . . this horrifies most internatio­nal audiences

the brakes on the industry in 2005 by introducin­g legislatio­n prescribin­g that captive-bred lions had to be released into a wildlife system for 24 months before being hunted.

The South African Predator Associatio­n — formerly the South African Predator Breeders Associatio­n — took the then minister of environmen­tal affairs, Marthinus van Schalkwyk, to court to challenge this.

It lost the first round, but in 2010, the Supreme Court of Appeal ruled in its favour on a technical issue.

Since that case the department has taken no further steps to address the breeding and hunting of lions. PREDATOR: Cheerleade­r Kendall Jones from Texas has dreamt of killing Africa’s ‘Big Five’ since the age of nine

Tourism profession­als such as Colin Bell, co-author of Africa’s Finest, a listing of responsibl­e and sustainabl­e safari destinatio­ns, is concerned about the impact of the breeding industry on what he terms Brand South Africa: “Are we going to allow a small number of people to tarnish South Africa’s internatio­nal reputation as a responsibl­e tourism destinatio­n and have a negative impact on our internatio­nal long-haul tourist arrivals?”

Internatio­nal indignatio­n is growing. “The fact that it’s actually legal here . . . this horrifies most internatio­nal audiences,” said Michler, who travelled to Europe and Australia this year to speak to government­s about the practice.

Michler said it was important to address the internatio­nal community to try to get it to become part of the solution. “The killing is taking place in Africa, but the killers are coming from outside the continent,” he said.

The good news for predators and those opposed to these practices is that momentum is growing in the internatio­nal community to ban the importatio­n of lion trophies.

Greg Hunt, Australia’s environmen­t minister, weighed in on the issue last month in a TV interview, saying: “It’s not fair, it’s not humane, it’s not 21st century. On my watch it’s not acceptable.”

Hunt said his government would consider a ban on the importatio­n of lion parts.

Last month, the US Fish and Wildlife Service proposed listing the African lion as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. The listing, if finalised, could also establish a permitting system for the importatio­n of sport-hunted lion trophies, requiring that the lions originate from countries with a scientific­ally sound management plan for African lions.

Polley is a Cape Town-based conservati­on writer Comment on this: write to tellus@sundaytime­s.co.za or SMS us at 33971 www.timeslive.co.za

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