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Times Online (From
the Sunday Times)
African Lion encounters: a bloody
con
Feb 10, 2008
Chris Haslam reveals the gruesome truth behind big-cat conservation
projects which British holiday firms champion

All cuddles for the cubs - but when they grow up,
they can suffer a grim fate
It’s the latest attraction for tourists visiting southern
Africa, but conservationists are warning that walking with lions
is – quite literally – a bloody con.
Dozens of private game parks across South Africa and Zimbabwe
offer, or have offered, tourists the opportunity to walk with,
handle and be photographed with lion cubs.
Excursions to some, such as the Aquila Private Game Reserve, outside
Cape Town, and the Seaview Game and Lion Park, in Port Elizabeth,
are offered by tour operators such as Kuoni, Virgin Holidays and
the Holland America cruise line.
Antelope Park, in Zimbabwe, charges about £20 for a 90-minute
lion encounter it describes as “not just a very privileged
photo opportunity, [but] the chance for you to become a conservationist”.
The park’s African Lion Environmental Research Trust (Alert)
programme is enthusiastically supported by Sir Ranulph Fiennes,
who, on his www.7summits.com website,
praises its efforts “to help steadily increase the number
of lions into areas carefully protected from poachers”.
The Sunday Times, however, has learnt that, far from being released
into the wild, as many as 59 lion cubs raised at Antelope Park
have been sold to big-game-hunting operations to be shot for sport.
So-called “canned hunting”, where rich trophy-hunters
pay thousands of pounds to shoot big game in fenced enclosures,
is big business in southern Africa. The price of shooting a lion
bred in captivity ranges from about £9,000 to £16,000,
and the breeders who supply the trade are struggling to keep up
with demand.
While some estimates suggest that there are less than 20,000 wild
lions remaining in Africa, the International Fund for Animal Welfare
reports that another 3,000 languish in captivity, bred as targets
for trophy-hunters. But breeders have found a lucrative sideline
to the bloody business of feeding canned hunts. By removing cubs
from mothers after about four days – to induce another breeding
cycle – they can rent them out to tourist parks to participate
in lion-walking attractions.
Tourists and the gap-year students employed as guides – many
of whom have paid up to £2,000 for conservation placements
with agencies such as Real Gap and All Africa Volunteers – are
told that the lion cubs are being raised for release in the wild,
but big-cat expert Dr Sarel van der Merwe, of the African Lion
Working Group, says this is impossible.
“Captive-bred lions can be released only into relatively
small areas, such as fenced-off game farms and private nature reserves.
Invasive management will always be necessary, such as removing
the breeding males to prevent inbreeding,” he says. “In
such cases, the older males will have to be placed elsewhere – and
where will that be? I’m of the opinion that such males will
have to be hunted for trophy purposes.”
In fact, there’s not much else you can do with a hand-reared
lion. “Hand-rearing of lion cubs will ensure that these
animals are imprinted to humans, and that they will thereafter
lack natural avoidance behaviours,” warns Dr Luke Hunter
of the Wildlife Conservation Society. Put another way, captive-bred,
hand-reared lions have the potential to become man-eaters, and
thus can never be allowed to roam free.
Daniel Turner, of the animal-welfare group the Born Free Foundation,
says that captive-bred lion cubs often have their teeth and claws
removed, and are drugged before meeting tourists. “These
animals are bred entirely for entertainment and derive no benefit
whatsoever from these operations,” he said. “We urge
people not to participate in any form of interaction with lions
or other big cats.”
Neither the Alert programme nor Sir Ranulph Fiennes could be reached
for comment, but the Aquila game reserve, in South Africa, said
that, following complaints from tour operators, it had now ceased
offering lion-cub petting. In an e-mail to The Sunday Times, the
park said: “We do not have lion cubs at the moment, but we
do have cheetahs you could interact with.”
Kuoni said that it works with the Born Free Foundation to ensure
that the excursions it offered were ethical, but that it is sometimes
impossible to stop customers being offered unapproved products
by suppliers. “
Kuoni currently features Aquila as an overnight excursion from
Cape Town, as a safari experience,” it added. “Given
the allegations regarding cub petting, which is condemned by Born
Free, Kuoni has withdrawn Aquila from sale until further notice
while investigations are being carried out.”
A spokesman for Virgin Holidays said: “Since learning of
this practice at the reserve, we have taken immediate action by
taking the excursion off-sale pending further investigation, and
will no longer offer it to our customers. Virgin Holidays takes
such issues very seriously”
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