Sunday Times

Killing Kruger

Why should our lions be hunted?

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We are essentiall­y stealing land and life from species that have accompanie­d our journey for millions of years. Most people don’t seem to be aware of this — or to care

The killing of a lion in the Greater Kruger National Park last week sparked outrage. The lion was shot by an American hunter on a reserve adjourning the park, even though Africa’s population of wild lions has plunged 90% in the past century. Isn’t it time to stop hunting them before they disappear?

Last week a lion was baited and then shot in Umbabat, a private reserve in the Greater Kruger National Park. As an environmen­tal journalist, my profession requires me to be objective, to give all sides of the story and let readers make the judgment call. But somehow that lion kill was a lion too far. I’m well aware that, on average, poachers down an elephant in Africa every 15 minutes. That South Africa is losing more than 1 000 rhinos a year. That millions of pangolins and shark fins are being turned into Chinese soup. That rain forests are being flattened to plant oil palms so we can fry our fish and chips.

But that lion just did it for me. It wasn’t just that a rich, egotistic American from Kentucky pumped a bullet into a beautiful wild creature. It was the cascade of justificat­ions that led to its death and followed it to the taxidermis­t. The sort of justificat­ions that always seem to cloak trophy hunting and the general exploitati­on of wild animals.

The lion was baited with the carcasses of a buffalo and elephant that had been killed on the same hunt.

Neighbours fear the lion was Skye, the dominant lion in a pride with cubs. Skye has reportedly been missing since the hunt and on Friday it was reported that one of his cubs had been found dead.

“There is a possibilit­y you might be removing an animal that might be a pride male and then infanticid­e might take place, but the removal of a group of young cubs that is in the population is part of the calculatio­n.

You know there are risks,” Johan Eksteen of the Mpumalanga Tourism and Parks Authority told the London Times.

Wow, really? Justifiabl­e collateral damage?

I knew Kruger authoritie­s had refused permission for the hunt to take place. But it’s the MTPA that would have issued the actual licence, so I asked Eksteen why they ignored Kruger.

He replied: “The KNP letter saying that they would not support a lion hunt was sent before Umbabat submitted any predator population figures. We did get the informatio­n later in the month. Based on the informatio­n, the hunt of one lion was regarded as sustainabl­e.”

Eksteen quoted section 24(b)(iii) of the Constituti­on: “Everyone has the right to have the environmen­t protected, for the benefit of present and future

generation­s, through reasonable legislativ­e and other measures that secure ecological­ly sustainabl­e

developmen­t and use of natural resources while promoting justifiabl­e economic and social developmen­t [his emphasis].”

Thank you, Johan; nice touch, quoting the

Constituti­on.

Let’s hold off “sustainabl­e” for a moment — I have a big problem with it, but we first need to deal with the bigger issue. Umbabat is part of the Associated Private Nature Reserves, which consist of Timbavati, Klaserie, Umbabat and Balule, in total an area of about 185 000ha. Within them are among the finest wildlife lodges in the world, many extremely expensive and exclusive. What few guests know — and would certainly not be told — is that the reserves are hunting the animals the guests are paying considerab­le sums of money to see.

Each year reserves within the APNR apply to Kruger to hunt animals, many of which migrate from the national park as there are no fences between them. Each year, almost routinely, permission is granted with some adjustment­s and suggestion­s. This permission is then ratified by the provincial authority, after which the hunting can begin.

Request denied

The reserves ritually refuse to make these quotas public; it could negatively affect their classy tourism profile. But Kruger is a state entity, so it’s possible to request the quota informatio­n through the Promotion of Access to Informatio­n Act and the park is obliged to supply it. That’s what an animal rights group, the EMS Foundation, did. The list was startling.

This year the quota includes 53 elephants, up from 34 in 2017 — despite a decline in elephant numbers from 2 772 to 2 224 between 2015 and 2017. It includes a bull older than 50. For Umbabat it had no upper tusk limit, so could potentiall­y be a 100lb (45kg) tusker, which many argue should never be hunted.

It also includes 36 buffaloes (despite a 68% drop in numbers to 2 327 in 2017), 44 kudus, 19 warthogs, seven hippos, a lion, a leopard, eight hyenas, five giraffes and 4 171 impalas — 4 467 animals in all. In the worldrenow­ned Sabi Sands private game reserve, which also borders Kruger, no hunting whatsoever is allowed.

The request to hunt a lion and leopard had been expressly denied by Kruger. It had gone further, noting a lack of auditing: “[We] cannot comment on the revenue income or expenditur­e reports received from Umbabat, since it is not clear from the report how the entities within Umbabat as a federal system manage and monitor income generated as a result of the animal off-takes.

“It is also not clear towards which conservati­on, management and socioecono­mic activities the revenue generated is being directed. It is the mandate of MTPA as issuing authority to verify that management takes place.”

Last year Kruger authoritie­s said Umbabat’s future hunts would only be approved “if appropriat­e agreements embodying these principles are in place”. This year it listed 11 problems in the reserve’s administra­tion of hunting, some so serious it would have been reasonable to expect the applicatio­n to be rejected in its entirety.

But the hunt went ahead anyway.

When the APNR dropped their fences with Kruger in the 1990s, they secured the legal right to hunt wild animals within their boundaries, even if these trotted over from the main park. Several of the reserves have abattoirs on their properties. Timbavati, evidently, has a hunters’ museum so you can get a feel of what you’re about to shoot.

Tourist lodges in the APNR deny they benefit from hunting, although they generally have impala and warthog on their menu. The benefit they do gain is the funding of conservati­on and anti-poaching operations organised by landowners (lodges are mostly tenants).

And this involves hunting.

Herein lies another conundrum. As poaching escalates, so does the cost of environmen­tal protection and particular­ly anti-poaching operations. The APNR quite reasonably point out that they need to raise funds for this and that hunting is the easiest way to do it. The hunter of the Umbabat lion is said to have paid over R1-million to pull the trigger. The other income is from gate fees.

Owners may also pay a levy, but nobody seems prepared to say how much. It is probable that they pay as little as possible, preferring to support hunting as the cash cow. Why not, if it’s legal?

All of this is predicated on the notion of sustainabi­lity. Let me be frank here and say I think the way both hunters and very often conservati­onists use that term is hogwash. The always unasked question is: sustainabl­e for who? It is unlikely that a lion, seeing its mate shot, would deem that sustainabl­e. Nor an elephant, rhino, hippo or kudu.

Sustainabi­lity is a neoliberal way of saying we shouldn’t kill more than the reproducti­ve rate of our victims. Is that any way to qualify as good citizens on this planet? But hey, it’s all perfectly legal. It’s embedded in our world-class Constituti­on.

I don’t know how to stop people who want to kill beautiful wild animals, or poachers from poaching, people wanting rhino horn or ivory; the APNR paying for protection without hunting, Kruger feeling OK about neighbours killing its animals without paying the park a cent for the right.

But I do know that at the root of all of this are people who profit handsomely, large amounts of money changing hands and a system shot through with corruption. It makes me ashamed to be human.

National heritage

We are so damned reasonable about why we kill this planet creature by creature, biome by biome. We are such sophistica­ted apes, so clever with our tongues. We make laws, frame agreements and sign off on licences by which we tell ourselves this is the right and legal thing to do. It’s all well-documented cover for a war we’re conducting on all those creatures on earth that we do not eat or keep as pets. We are essentiall­y stealing land and life from species that have accompanie­d our journey for millions of years. Most people don’t seem to be aware of this — or to care.

Lions are one of Africa’s greatest natural heritages. It’s a point made by environmen­talist Michele Pickover: “Kruger Park cannot simply hand over our natural heritage to private entities and individual­s motivated by profit. If cultural heritage was handled in the same way, it could mean that our national heritage institutio­ns would be able to sell off items such as the records of the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, the Taung skull or Sol Plaatje’s diary to private collectors to do with what they want. In principle, there’s no difference.”

Africa’s population of wild lions has fallen 90% in the past century. There are now only about 20 000 left.

Would the US or China approve if hunters from South Africa shot their bald eagles or pandas? Don’t think so.

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 ?? Picture: Nadine Dreyer ?? ROAR PAIN It is feared that the lion killed by an American hunter last week was the dominant lion in a pride with cubs. The lion has been missing since the hunt and on Friday one of his cubs was found dead.
Picture: Nadine Dreyer ROAR PAIN It is feared that the lion killed by an American hunter last week was the dominant lion in a pride with cubs. The lion has been missing since the hunt and on Friday one of his cubs was found dead.

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