Urgent funding required for predator holding facility.
2004.06.07. 13:48
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Urgent funding required for predator holding
facility. 28 November 2003 18:43:41 PM
South Africa has since 1997
gained a very bad reputation in regard to the breeding of lions especially to
supply a growing demand for hunting trophies. |
This practise was soon to be known as “Canned
Hunting” and since its exposure by the Cooke Report not too much has changed in
South Africa, over the last five years there has been a dramatic increase in the
establishment of new breeding facilities.
From government’s side they
have mostly ignored the pleas of the local and international animal welfare
communities that indeed the hunting of “Canned Lions” should be outlawed and
banned altogether. Various animal rights groups in South Africa have attempted
to go the legal route and bring court applications to stop Canned hunting, but
unfortunately going the legal route is very costly and not within the financial
capabilities of most animal welfare organisations.
To help the true
victims here, who obviously are the lions themselves, one needs to understand
the complex nature of the problem. The captive lion breeding projects were
started mostly without the permission of the conservation departments, but when
it reached alarming proportions and the public in general started hearing about
the horrible shooting of captive bred and human imprinted lions, it was already
to late to stop the monster. The lion breeders had already established a huge
industry and were not going to let up without a heck of a fight and serious
legal implications for the conservation departments. Threats of lawsuits came up
and the conservation department were faced with the problem of dealing with the
situation.
Many of the lion breeders indeed claimed that they were
breeding lions for conservation purposes, which to this day, needs to be proven
to me personally. I have not seen the conservation aspect neither have the
arguments that I have heard, convinced me that indeed there is a need to breed
lions in South Africa for hunting purposes. It is my personal opinion that the
hunting of any captive bred animal is cruel and inhumane. I do believe people
have a terrible obsession with collecting animal trophies and rare plants and
that this obsession poses a serious threat to human decency and compassion.
To blame each other and constantly pass the buck, will not solve the
problem and indeed just serve to demoralise individual members of our
conservation and criminal investigation departments as not all of them are
irresponsible and not interested in their work. We have realised in our
cooperation with various departments that indeed there are those that will crawl
through the desert on their hands and knees without any water and will within
their allocated powers do anything necessary to protect our natural fauna and
flora. Unfortunately it is also so, that in a world with growing human needs and
demands, funding for conservation has become scarce, especially in the case of
“Canned Lions”.
Lion breeders will spend millions on setting up their
projects as the financial returns are astronomical, but on the flip side of the
coin, is the fact that if one wants to raise funds to help the victims of this
terrible industry, the support is few and far between and if it does come, the
price tag attached demands a hell of a lot.
To solve the problem of
“Canned Lions” is not going to be easy and personally I do hope the government
will outlaw the practise altogether, but that remains to be seen and at the
moment I am not too confident that it will ever happen. However I have been
wrong before.
In our efforts to try and find a solution to the problem we
discovered that many lions are held illegally today and that indeed the
conservation department would be interested to remove such animals if they had a
facility available for such purposes. We approached our local conservation
officers and offered to raise funds and make such a facility available. To our
joy they accepted and last week the first 6 lions arrived at SanWild, but we
only now realised that indeed this is only the beginning.
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