The Witness

CABINET TO ADOPT POLICY TO END CAPTIVE BREEDING OF LIONS AND RHINOS

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Cabinet has agreed to end the controvers­ial captive breeding of lions and rhinos. It approved a Policy Position submitted by Environmen­t Minister Barbara Creecy to close lion facilities and end commercial exploitati­on of lions and “canned” hunts.

Cabinet also agreed to phase out intensive management and captive breeding of rhinos and to enhance the conservati­on of wild leopards. It also agreed to limit the live export of lions, elephants, leopards and both rhino species to only habitats within Africa. This effectivel­y curbs the growing Asian demand for zoo specimens.

On the export of rhino horn and ivory, the policy says South Africa would work to support internatio­nal trade, only when “conditions became favourable”. It does not specify what these conditions are, but does provide a local platform upon which the contested CITES ban on export can be debated. It says there is “no immediate intention to trade in rhino horn.”

According to a media statement by the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and Environmen­t, the policy “will transform practices within the wildlife industry that are not conducive to animal well-being and promote conservati­on and sustainabl­e use of biodiversi­ty in general, and these species in particular.

“This will enhance South Africa’s position as a megadivers­e country and leader in the conservati­on and sustainabl­e use of these iconic species.”

The policy is the result of nearly a decade of inquiries, reports, a parliament­ary colloquium and increasing local and internatio­nal abhorrence of “canned” lion hunting which was highlighte­d in a shocking film flighted in 2015 called Blood Lions.

These inquiries include the Rhino Committee of Inquiry (2015), the Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee Lion Colloquium on lion breeding (2018), the High-Level Panel Report on lions, rhinos, elephants and leopards (2021) and the White Paper on Conservati­on and Sustainabl­e use of South Africa’s Biodiversi­ty (2023).

More recently, the collapse of rhino farmer John Hume’s breeding programme left the fate of around 2 000 rhinos at risk until it was saved through a purchase for relocation by the NGO Africa Parks. The fate of his considerab­le stockpile of horns is unknown.

The acceptance of the Policy Position coincides with the release for discussion by the Environmen­t Department of a Biodiversi­ty Economy Strategy. This proposes to grow areas under conservati­on — called mega living conservati­on landscapes — from 20 million hectares to 34 million

hectares by 2040, an area equal to seven Kruger National Parks.

The strategy envisages an increased focus on tourism in these landscapes, as well as more Big Five animals available for fair-chase trophy hunting. It also envisages an expansion of recreation­al and traditiona­l hunting, wild meat harvesting and fishing, and the increased use of indigenous plants and insects for food. The plan massively extends areas under a form of protection.

The banning of captive-bred lion farming raises the issue of what to do with around 10 000 lions. A department­ally appointed panel has been discussing this since its appointmen­t last year and its recommenda­tions are due for release soon.

Captive-bred lions cannot be rewilded because of genetic inbreeding, poor condition of many and because lions are social animals which are taught to hunt and survive in open systems by a pride. There seem to be three options: euthanise, open them for hunting or fund their care in sanctuarie­s. It’s likely that a mix of these solutions will be considered.

The Policy Position calls for enhanced conservati­on of wild rhinos and elephants under private, community and state ownership, an acknowledg­ement that private ownership of wildlife — unique to South Africa — has been a conservati­on success story. It makes a clear distinctio­n between intensive wildlife farming and wild ranching, which would include private game reserves.

 ?? PHOTO: GALLO ?? Cubs running at the farm of Willie Jacobs in Brits, North West Province. The farm was heavily criticised after the release of ‘Blood Lions’, a 2015 canned hunting exposé.
PHOTO: GALLO Cubs running at the farm of Willie Jacobs in Brits, North West Province. The farm was heavily criticised after the release of ‘Blood Lions’, a 2015 canned hunting exposé.

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