Captive Lions /Canned Hunting in SA

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Captive Lions/Canned Hunting in SA

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Ramaphosa petitioned to halt big cat breeding

BY DON PINNOCK - 6TH OCTOBER 2020 - THE SOUTH AFRICAN -

While government, wildlife farmers and NGOs remain locked in discussion about the future of lions, elephants, rhinos and leopards, the British conservation organisation, Born Free, has called on President Ramaphosa to close down the predator breeding industry.

Born Free has gathered around 250 000 signatures calling on the South African authorities to end the hunting of captive-bred lions as well as breeding and keeping them in captivity for commercial purposes.

It says that if South Africa is to be regarded as a responsible and ethical custodian of its wildlife and a country that cares about wildlife, urgent action needs to be taken to bring an end captive breeding and the sale of lion bones and skeletons into international markets.

Failure to do this, it warns, will have a huge impact on international tourism to the country, which is already struggling to recover from COVID-19 lockdowns.

“The industry’s unashamed exploitation of lions as cheap tourist props,” say Born Free, “is seriously damaging South Africa’s reputation as a wildlife tourism destination. Our petition, consisting of a quarter of a million signatures, demonstrates the strength of international public feeling.”

THE IMPACT ON TOURISM

There has been widespread concern about tourism activities promoted by the predator-breeding industry, including cub petting, walking with lions and the exploitation of unwitting volunteers who pay to help raise captive-bred lion cubs in the mistaken belief that they’re orphans destined to be returned to the wild.

Since 2008, South Africa has also exported more than 6,000 lion skeletons weighing at least 70 tonnes, mainly to Lao PDR and Vietnam. Most of these are from captive breeding facilities.

ILLEGAL ACTIVITY AND THE PETITION AGAINST IT

According to the UN Office of Drugs and Crime, SA’s lion bone industry is known to have close connections to international wildlife trafficking, with poachers laundering illegal bones and other body parts into the legal trade. It says the trade undermines lion conservation efforts of other countries such as Kenya.

In 2018, following a recommendation from the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee of Environmental Affairs, the South African Parliament adopted a resolution saying: “The Department of Environmental Affairs should as a matter of urgency initiate a policy and legislative review of the captive breeding of lions for hunting and lion bone trade, with a view to putting an end to this practice.”

Since then, the Government has failed to act on this recommendation, appointing instead a High-Level Panel packed with breeders and hunters to “review” the situation. Many conservation NGOs say its conclusions are unlikely to be in line with wild animal welfare.

“For the past 20 years,” says Born Free, “the South African authorities have consistently facilitated the growth of South Africa’s captive predator breeding industry by maintaining legislation which enables provincial officials to issue permits for lion breeding and hunting and the export of lion bones.

“As President, you have the power to immediately initiate the actions necessary to humanely and permanently close the commercial industry.”

The Born Free petition follows a call by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) at its World Conservation Congress calling on South Africa to terminate the practice of breeding lions in captivity for the purpose of canned shooting.

Original article: https://www.thesouthafrican.com/lifesty ... -breeding/


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Re: Captive Lions /Canned Hunting IN SA

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STOP KILLING LIONS FOR FUN

BY BORN FREE - OCTOBER 2020 - BORN FREE FOUNDATION

Last year, Born Free released The Bitter Bond—a multi-award-winning animated short film depicting the callous exploitation of lions from birth to premature death by the canned hunting industry. The Bitter Bond was accompanied by a petition calling authorities in South Africa to close down the industry once and for all.

Today (4th October), a year on, and to mark World Animal Day, Born Free has submitted that petition, containing close to a quarter of a million signatures, to South African President, Cyril Ramaphosa and other members of his government.

Will Travers OBE, Executive President of Born Free, said: “Our message is clear: Killing captive-bred wild lions and other species for fun—with no chance of escape—is wrong and must end. President Ramaphosa has the power to immediately initiate the actions necessary to humanely and permanently close the commercial captive predator breeding industry and its associated activities, including captive lion trophy hunting and the export of lion skeletons for commercial purposes.”

South Africa’s captive predator breeding industry, involving as many as 300 facilities and between 8,000 and 12,000 captive big cats, has long been the subject of international condemnation. In 2016, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature adopted a resolution at its World Conservation Congress calling on South Africa to terminate the practice of breeding lions in captivity for the purpose of canned shooting, and to restrict the captive breeding of lions to registered facilities whose documented mandate is as a recognised, registered conservation project.

But killing captive-bred lions for ‘fun’ is only part of the story. Since 2008, South Africa has exported more than 6,000 lion skeletons weighing at least 70 tonnes principally to Lao PDR and Vietnam, the overwhelming majority from captive breeding facilities. The lion bone industry has close connections to international wildlife trafficking, putting wild lions and other big cat species at increased risk from poachers seeking to launder illegal bones and other body parts into the legal trade, a concern echoed in the most recent wildlife crime report from the UN Office of Drugs and Crime. The trade also undermines the hard-won lion conservation efforts of other countries such as Kenya which has seen lion numbers recover from around 2,000 individuals in 2010 to nearly 2,500 today.

There has also been widespread international concern about tourism activities promoted by the predator-breeding industry, including cub petting, walking with lions, and the exploitation of unwitting volunteers who pay to help raise captive-bred lion cubs in the mistaken belief that they are orphans and that, one day, they are destined to be returned to the wild. With regard to the latter, Born Free is a strong supporter of the Claws Out campaign, initiated by a former unwitting volunteer at a lion breeding facility in South Africa who now campaigns to expose the cruel industry and its fake claims.

South Africa’s Biodiversity Management Plan for the African Lion recognises that “there is intense controversy over the merits and ethics of captive breeding and subsequent release for hunting of captive-bred lions”, that “captive lions are bred exclusively to generate money”, and that “captive-bred lions do not contribute to the conservation of the species, especially for population restoration purposes, since inbreeding is known to occur and thus compromises genetic integrity and provenance”.

Responding to these widespread concerns, in November 2018, following a recommendation from the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee of Environmental Affairs, the South African Parliament adopted a resolution which stated: “The Department of Environmental Affairs should as a matter of urgency initiate a policy and legislative review of the captive breeding of lions for hunting and lion bone trade, with a view to putting an end to this practice.” Since then, the government has failed to act.

Indeed, for the past 20 years, the South African authorities have consistently facilitated the growth of South Africa’s captive predator breeding industry by maintaining legislation which enables provincial officials to issue permits for lion breeding and hunting and the export of lion bones.

Born Free’s Head of Policy, veterinarian Dr Mark Jones, said: “South Africa’s lion breeding industry is a cynical and cruel business that exploits tens of thousands of animals for profit, while contributing nothing to lion conservation. Its association with canned hunting and the international trade in lion bones, with all the negative connotations for the welfare of captive lions and the conservation of wild lions and other big cats, has been widely condemned. Plus, the industry’s unashamed exploitation of lions as cheap tourist props is seriously damaging South Africa’s reputation as a responsible international wildlife tourism destination. Our petition, consisting of a quarter of a million signatures, demonstrates the strength of international public feeling. We call on the South African authorities to bring an end to the predator breeding industry, with utmost consideration for the welfare of the animals involved.

“Born Free believes that if South Africa is to be regarded as a responsible and ethical custodian of its wildlife, and a country that sets an example concerning wildlife conservation elsewhere in Africa and across the globe, urgent action needs to be taken to bring an end, in an intelligent and humane way, to the commercial captive breeding and canned hunting of lions and other predators, and, importantly, the sale of their bones and skeletons into international markets,” Dr Jones added.


Orignial article: https://www.bornfree.org.uk/news/petition-hand-in


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Re: Captive Lions /Canned Hunting IN SA

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Ramping up the offensive! :-0


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Re: Captive Lions /Canned Hunting in SA

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Lion farming – Lord Ashcroft submission to South African High Level Panel

Posted on October 9, 2020 by Guest Contributor in the OPINION EDITORIAL post series.

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Presentation by Lord Ashcroft KCMG PC to the High-Level Panel examining the policies, legislation and practices related to the management of elephant, leopard, rhino and lion in South Africa. Delivered on Wednesday, 07 October 2020.

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Earlier this year, I sent each of you a copy of my book, Unfair Game, in which I expose the appalling truth about South Africa’s captive lion industry.

I have no doubt that you are all busy people, but I sincerely hope that you found some time to look at it.

If you did, you’d know that lion farming is a four-stage process. As cubs, these animals are taken from their mothers and used as tourist magnets. When older, they entertain tourists on “lion walking” excursions. Later, they’re shot in a “canned hunt” – a hunt in an enclosed space from which a lion cannot escape. Either that or they’re slaughtered for their bones and then stripped for their parts much as a thief might plunder a car. These bones are then sold for large sums of money in Asian wildlife markets.

Between being born and dying, some of these creatures are drugged and beaten to make them behave. They exist on a very limited diet. They carry diseases. They’re emotionally damaged. The abuse they suffer is unimaginable.

But it’s not just the appalling cruelty to the lions themselves that is harming South Africa’s reputation around the rest of the world.

The business of lion farming surely ranks as a prime example of how quickly profound wickedness can take root and then wreak havoc on a thing of beauty in a civilised country – a country that I love, by the way.

My research suggests there are now about 12,000 of these animals now being held in pens around South Africa. They outnumber wild lions by four to one.

These animals are bred in the name of profit. A lot of the money generated by these lions is the product of illegal activity, making these gains truly ill-gotten. In my opinion, this puts all of the beneficiaries of the captive-bred lion industry on a par with drug dealers.

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In a world whose animal population is diminishing, and whose human population is growing, the problems associated with the lion industry are complex.

And yet, as my lengthy studies of this trade demonstrate, it really does seem that South Africa’s authorities have so far had no interest in tackling this hateful situation in earnest.

Arguably, the authorities have become the enablers of all of this, overseeing lion hunting regulations and awarding licences for the export of lion bones with what appears to be the lightest of touches and wilfully ignoring wrongdoing when they learn of it.

At the moment, this is largely restricted to South Africa. But once the international criminal syndicates have worked out how to create greater demand for the body parts of lions, wild lions right around Africa will become increasingly heavily poached – just like rhinos and elephants.

Then there is the health aspect to consider.

As my book shows, thousands of lion bones are smuggled out of South Africa each year to feed the Asian market for big cat products and so-called “traditional” medicines. Experts quoted in the book say a major public health incident will occur in Asia as a result of its people’s rampant consumption of lion bones – bones which are harvested in South Africa. It could be a serious infectious disease or a new disease we’ve never heard of, just like Covid-19. Lions also carry TB, which killed 1.5 million people in 2018. Any sense that South Africa failed to act when it had due warning would be disastrous for your people and their livelihoods.

So what can be done to solve this problem? I would urge you to recommend that the South African government bans captive-bred lion farming.

I would ask that you ensure airlines, shipping firms and freight companies operating in South Africa are heavily penalised if they are caught transporting the trophies or bones of captive-bred lions.

And ‘voluntourism’ holidays, lion cub petting and ‘walking with lions’ experiences must also be outlawed. Editorial note: Lord Ashcroft subsequently clarified that he was referring to voluntourism associated only with the lion-breeding industry, and NOT other forms of voluntourism.

One of the most shocking aspects of the recent investigation into lion farming that I launched was that when it ended, my team took their findings to a senior police officer in Pretoria who specialises in wildlife issues. Not only did he not read the evidence file they gave him, but having rejected it, he also threatened to put them in prison.

I don’t believe that the members of this panel hold this unsympathetic attitude. I am certain you know right from wrong.

I wrote Unfair Game because I wanted to help end lion farming in South Africa for once and for all.

I hope that you will all share this aim. I will help you in any way I can to bring about its demise.

Thank you very much.

LORD ASHCROFT, KCMG PC


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Re: Captive Lions /Canned Hunting in SA

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Quite a cocktail of tactics, My Lord! lol

The only sensible thing he rants is that lion management is complex, the rest is emotional.


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Re: Captive Lions /Canned Hunting in SA

Post by Lisbeth »

It is not! In some (most) places those lions are treated terribly without any respect for their well being :evil:


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Re: Captive Lions /Canned Hunting in SA

Post by Klipspringer »

Moral concerns in the conservation and wildlife business are irrelevant for some people, they don't care about animal or human abuse.


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Re: Captive Lions /Canned Hunting in SA

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It’s high time SA shut down the captive lion breeding industry

By Andreas Wilson-Spath• 12 October 2020

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In a damning report, the committee described the industry as an “international pariah” and “a blemish on South Africa’s wildlife and tourism landscape” that “might have done irreparable damage” to the country globally. (Image: Blood Lions)

Will the government and its high-level panel finally accept the overwhelming evidence that captive lion breeding should be stopped?

A small number of people breeding lions in captivity is holding South Africa’s wildlife reputation hostage with strawman arguments about the supposed benefits of the industry when, in fact, both public and scientific debate has conclusively demonstrated that it has no conservation value, that it is damaging to the country and that it should be closed down.

That was the conclusion of the parliamentary portfolio committee on environmental affairs after a colloquium including a wide range of stakeholders as far back as 2018. In a damning report, the committee described the industry as an “international pariah” and “a blemish on South Africa’s wildlife and tourism landscape” that “might have done irreparable damage” to the country globally.

It further observed that, while currently lawful, the industry’s practices are seen as unethical, immoral and socially unacceptable with zero conservation value, as captive-bred lions cannot be released into the wild and have minimal economic value.

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Cubs of about four weeks old in a petting enclosure. (Image: Blood Lions)

The committee resolved inter alia that “the Department of Environmental Affairs should as a matter of urgency initiate a policy and legislative review of captive breeding of lions for hunting and lion bone trade with a view to putting an end to this practice”. This resolution was subsequently adopted by the National Assembly.

Conservationists read the strongly worded resolution with hopeful optimism as it seemed to suggest the imminent demise of captive lion breeding.

What followed, however, was a distinct lack of action by the authorities, who have continued to distinguish themselves by their utter failure to adequately regulate the industry, let alone close it down.

How many breeders? How many lions?

Another 2018 parliamentary committee resolution instructed the then Department of Environmental Affairs “to conduct an audit of captive lion breeding facilities throughout the country” to ensure compliance with laws and regulations, but any official audits conducted so far are incomplete and inadequate.

Perhaps the best indicator of the government’s inability or unwillingness to control lion breeders is the fact that it can’t even seem to provide accurate figures on breeding facilities and the number of lions held in them.

In March 2019, the Department of Environment, Forestry and Fisheries indicated that 227 breeding facilities had been inspected, but offered no information on the number of lions involved. In August of the same year, the minister pegged the official numbers at 366 registered facilities with 7,979 lions, while by November, reported numbers were back down to 239 inspections and a total of 6,587 lions.

So how many lion breeding farms and how many captive-bred lions are there really in South Africa?

Independent estimates by conservation organisations LionAid, World Animal Protection and Blood Lions put the real figures at around 459 breeding facilities and between 10,000 and 12,000 captive-bred lions.

What is particularly shocking about these numbers is that the South African industry may be breeding more lions for profit from trophy hunting, live export and the sale of lion bones and skeletons to South-East Asian traditional medicine markets than remain alive in the wild on the entire continent, now estimated at fewer than 10,000.

Unregulated and poorly governed

In addition to its failure to make accurate industry figures available to the public, local conservation organisations such as the EMS Foundation have complained about government’s misrepresentation and lack of transparency, even when faced with legal requests for information under the Promotion of Access to Information Act.

There appear to be no mechanisms in place on a national level that would allow authorities to accurately verify the status of breeding farms or trace the whereabouts of captive-bred lions. It is unclear how the government expects to control the industry under these conditions.

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A white lion with classic inbreeding features. (Image: Blood Lions)

What’s worse, when violations are uncovered, these are casually dismissed or ignored without legal consequences for the guilty parties. When government inspections of 227 breeding facilities revealed that 88 did not comply with permits or regulations, all permits were simply renewed.

In the face of mounting criticism, including international petitions to shut down the industry, Environment, Forestry and Fisheries Minister Barbara Creecy has established a high-level panel for the review of policies, legislation and practices on matters of elephant, lion, leopard and rhinoceros management, breeding, hunting, trade and handling under the National Environmental Management: Biodiversity Act. The composition and restrictive terms of reference have also drawn allegations of bias.

Why the industry needs to be stopped

There is no shortage of compelling reasons for bringing captive predator breeding to an end.

Disgraceful animal welfare conditions at breeding facilities have been exposed internationally and a forthcoming paper by the NSPCA documents high rates of injury and disease among captive lions at 95 breeding farms operating under conditions of general neglect, characterised by poor hygiene, malnutrition, food and water deprivation, insufficient veterinary care and inadequate shelters and enclosures.

The 2018 parliamentary committee report noted that revenues generated by the industry, “while lucrative for the owners” represent “only a tiny proportion” of the country’s income from tourism for which it is “not worth compromising our national brand reputation and position as a unique wildlife destination”.

These comments are confirmed by independent research.

A 2017 paper showed that the industry is predominantly owned by white middle-aged males and contributes only about R500-million to the national economy while sustaining fewer than 1,200 direct and indirect jobs. Compare this with employment figures of 1.5 million and a contribution to the 2017 GDP of R412.5-billion by tourism as a whole.

A new peer-reviewed study uses cost-benefit-analysis to estimate that the miserable international image of the lion breeding industry can be expected to cost the South African tourist sector a devastating R46-billion ($2.79-billion) over the next decade.

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A cub with partial paralysis of the back legs from suspected meningoencephalitis infection. (Image: Blood Lions)

While a criminal neglect of animal welfare standards and crippling economic impacts ought to provide sufficient motivation for closing down the industry, the potential threat it poses to human health only adds to the urgent need for action, particularly in the middle of a global pandemic.

A new investigation has revealed the presence of no fewer than 63 pathogens in wild and captive lions, including ones that can be transmitted from lions to other animals and humans. These bacteria, viruses, parasites and fungi are associated with a total of 83 clinical symptoms and diseases.

To its credit, the 2018 parliamentary committee recognised the public health risk presented by captive lion breeding through such zoonotic diseases, including tuberculosis, well before Covid-19. It’s high time that its recommendation to put “an end to this practice” finally becomes official government policy.

No compensation

Presented with all of this evidence and faced with worldwide condemnation of the industry, why is it that the government has yet to take decisive action against it?

There have been suggestions that lion breeders are threatening to demand compensation for loss of property and income if the government decides to close down their operations.

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A subadult with untreated mange. (Image: Blood Lions)

But this argument has been conclusively dismissed by the EMS Foundation in response to a question from the minister’s high-level panel. Noting that the right to property does not trump other regulations, laws and constitutional provisions, the organisation points out that the government has the legal right to take policy decisions against practices that are damaging to the country and violate its constitution without the need to pay compensation.

Indeed, the question should be framed from the opposite perspective: “will the industry compensate for the loss and potential economic and reputational harm caused to the country by its activity”?

And what is to happen to the thousands of captive-bred animals if the government were to shut down the industry? Humane Society International notes that, while NGOs could assist in repurposing existing breeding facilities and developing welfare plans for the cats, the onus to find and fund a solution is on the industry, which, along with government, chose to ignore repeated warnings about the legal, financial, reputational and other risks for over 10 years, and instead decided to expand its operations in the pursuit of profits.

It remains to be seen whether the SA government and it’s high-level panel finally accepts the weight of evidence against captive lion breeding and do the right thing to save both the country’s conservation reputation and those thousands of lions condemned to a life of misery. DM


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Re: Captive Lions /Canned Hunting in SA

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Daily Maverick also firmly part of a crusade! ..0..


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Re: Captive Lions /Canned Hunting in SA

Post by Lisbeth »

It is difficult to defend the breeding and hunting of captive lions ;-)


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