Lions arrive at SanWild
2004.06.07. 13:44
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Lions arrive at SanWild 24 November 2003
16:24:32 PM
Six lions, two adult females, a large male and three six
months old cubs arrived at SanWild on Thursday night after the Limpopo
Department of Nature Conservation had confiscated them. |
All the lions were held illegally without permits
in a captive breeding project.
The conservation department turned down
the permit application, but despite their refusal the owner simply went ahead
and constructed breeding camps. The two adult females had already given
birth once before, but had all their cubs removed within days after being born.
The removal of cubs from their mothers is a common practise amongst South
Africa's lion breeders to allow females to come into oestrus sooner so that they
may produce more cubs for their owners who have turned the breeding and hunting
of captive bred animals into a very lucrative trade. Little or no consideration
is given to the lion’s physiological and physical welfare. Liones's have become
breeding machines and male lions instant trophies. SanWild condemns the
practise in the strongest possible terms, it is disgusting and morally and
ethically totally unacceptable, but there again, one can question how many
ethics and humanity remain in our wildlife industry where wild animals are
regarded merely as commodities to be traded and exploited in any way as long as
they earn large amouns of money for their owners. Despite South Africa’s
lucrative tourism industry there are those who simply do not have the compassion
neither the brains to appreciate wild animals for their intrinsic value. The
lions that arrived will need veterinary care, we need to urgently raise enough
funds to feed the animals properly. All the adult lions are obese and have not
been fed nutritionally correct. The three little female cubs already suffer from
a mineral deficiency and we will have to immediately act to ensure their
long-term welfare. A rehabilitation program will start immediately to prepare
the lions for possible release back into the wild as soon as the legal machine
has run its course. We trust in the ability of the conservation and criminal
investigations department to ensure that these six lions in particular will
never be returned to the “canned lion” hunting industry to either breed cubs or
to end up as trophies. Please support this worthwhile conservation and law
enforcement project with your donations as soon as possible in order to allow us
to continue our support for our conservation department so that they may have
the powers to prevent any further expansion of an industry, which should never
have seen the light on the African continent. We simply cannot do it without
your financial support.
You can help by adopting a lion to help pay for
its specialised dietary requirements, using the Adopt Me section in the
AfriTrust website. We also need more land so that we can release the lions into
a sanctuary large enough to accommodate these magnificent predators. See the Set
Me Free section to help Sanwild acquire more land.
For more information
on canned lion hunting kindly email info@afritrust.com or visit the following
websites: www.careforthewild.com or
www.sanwild.org
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