The Daily Telegraph

Lion mauls British sanctuary owner who reared it from a cub

Man suffers broken jaw and cuts after animal attacked him in its enclosure in South Africa

- Adrian Blomfield in Nairobi By

THE British owner of a wildlife sanctuary in South Africa has been severely injured by a lion that he hand-reared from a cub in an attack that was witnessed and filmed by his tourist clients.

Michael Hodge, 71, was attacked as he walked into the enclosure of the Marakele Animal Sanctuary’s star attraction, a male lion named Shamba.

Video footage of Saturday’s incident shows Mr Hodge, who moved to South Africa in 1999, walking in a relaxed manner towards the lion as a ranger outside the fence attempts to distract the animal.

Mr Hodge, who founded the sanctuary in South Africa’s Limpopo region with his wife Chrissy and stepdaught­er Emma in 2010, was reportedly investigat­ing a strange smell that had been upsetting the lion.

Suddenly, Mr Hodge is seen running for the gate of Shamba’s enclosure, before being brought down by the lion, his body crashing against the fence.

A woman can be heard sobbing and screaming “Oh my god!” and “Somebody help, please!” as the lion drags Mr Hodge away into a thicket. Mr Hodge is heard to cry out “Help me, please!”

Shots ring out, fired by the ranger, prompting Shamba to drop the injured Mr Hodge. The lion retreated a few yards from the bush where the Briton lay, but not far enough to allow a safe rescue attempt to be made.

Shamba was then killed, a family friend, Bernadette Maguire, said, before Mr Hodge was taken to a clinic three miles away in the town of Thabazimbi. He was later airlifted to a hospital in Johannesbu­rg. Mrs Hodge

‘One lion slept in Mike’s bed, washing his face and giving him a spit-bath daily at 3am’

said her husband had been hurt but was now recovering. “He has a broken jaw and several laceration­s, but is recovering well,” she said in a statement. She added that the family were “devastated” over Shamba’s death.

The lion, born in 2008, had been hand-reared since it was a month old, with Mrs Hodge nursing it through a near-fatal dose of colic, according to friends.

Shamba was one of the most popular of the dozen or so big cats housed in the sanctuary’s “predator park”.

Tourists could pay an extra fee to be locked into a cage on the back of a pickup vehicle. Shamba had been trained to leap on to the cage to eat freshly slaughtere­d chickens hung from the bars. Tourists would then photograph Shamba from just inches away as the feathers flew.

“Come and take a ride on the wild side in our purpose-built Lion Mobile,” the sanctuary’s website reads.

“I can promise you that Shamba will jump up and look you in the eye.”

Previous visitors and volunteers said that Mr Hodge had long experience with lions, having hand-reared three from cubs.

One, a lioness named Nina, even slept on his bed, according to Emerita Abadilla, a former volunteer.

“She slept in Mike’s bed, washing his face and giving him a spit-bath daily at 3am,” she wrote in a blog post two years ago. Apart from lions, the sanctuary also housed at least two tigers.

Some visitors to the sanctuary’s Facebook page criticised the manner in which Shamba was killed and the park run.

But friends also came to Mr Hodge’s defence, saying he had a “special bond” with the lion.

 ??  ?? Video footage shows wildlife sanctuary owner Michael Hodge (above left) being attacked by Shamba the lion in its enclosure (above)
Video footage shows wildlife sanctuary owner Michael Hodge (above left) being attacked by Shamba the lion in its enclosure (above)
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