SA farmers involved in big cat smuggling - report

About 10 years ago, when the Department of Environmental Affairs tackled the issue of canned lion hunting, the resultant legislation ruled that captive-bred lions had to be released into large areas for two years before they could be commercially hunted.

About 10 years ago, when the Department of Environmental Affairs tackled the issue of canned lion hunting, the resultant legislation ruled that captive-bred lions had to be released into large areas for two years before they could be commercially hunted.

Published May 27, 2013

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Johannesburg - South African lion breeders are allegedly part of an illegal network that smuggles lion and cheetah cubs from Botswana to stock local farms, The Times reported on Monday.

The newspaper reported that at least five South African lion farmers were mentioned in an investigation into cases where cubs were smuggled to lion farms in South Africa to cater for the international trophy-hunting market.

“I don't want to say lion breeders as a whole are involved, but there are definitely five or six people that I know of,” conservationist Sarel van der Merwe told the newspaper.

“The guys in the Problem Animal Control Group (a government body that deals with 'problem' predators in Botswana) all have cellphones. Instead of reporting problem animals to their superiors, they call farmers in South Africa.”

If the problem animal was a lioness, she would be shot and her cubs smuggled out.

According to the report, Hawks spokesperson Paul Ramaloko could not confirm any investigations into cross-border animal smuggling.

The Times reported that canned hunting (trophy-hunting animals in an enclosed area) was banned in South Africa in 2007.

The SA Predator Association appealed against the ban and won the case in the Supreme Court of Appeal in 2011. - Sapa

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