-Caveat Lector-

Click Here: <A 
HREF="http://www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,479311,00.

html">Guardian Unlimited | The Guardian | Lions face …</A>
----
Lions face new threat: they're rich, American and they've got guns 

Schwarzkopf and Bush Snr mobilise opposition as Botswana moves to save its 
big cats

Special report: George Bush's America 

Chris McGreal in Johannesburg
Friday April 27, 2001
The Guardian 

You might call the lions of southern Africa potential Bush meat. The former 
American president, George Bush senior, and his old Gulf War ally, General 
"Stormin' Norman" Schwarzkopf, are pleading with the government of Botswana 
to be allowed to revive their old alliance, this time in pursuit of Africa's 
endangered big cats. 

Mr Bush is among prominent members of Safari Club International (SCI) who 
have written to the Botswanan authorities asking them to lift a ban slapped 
on trophy hunting of lions in February. 
Arizona-based SCI describes itself as the largest hunting organisation in the 
world and people who do not like what it does as "animal protection 
extremists". 

Mr Bush's former vice-president, Dan Quayle, is also among the signatories 
along with Gen Schwarzkopf. Both men went hunting in Botswana last year, 
although it is not known if they bagged lions on that occasion. 
Rich Americans, Europeans and Japanese pay about £20,000 a time to kill a 
lion in Botswana. The government usually permits the shooting of about 50 
lions a year by trophy hunters but decided to impose the ban in part because 
American shooters favour lions with thick manes for their walls, leading to a 
disproportionate killing of mature males. 

The shortage of such beasts is now so great that hunters have been making use 
of a mane-extension service back in the US where fake hair is weaved in to 
give their trophies an extra flourish before they hang the heads. 

Among those who campaigned for a ban on lion hunting in Botswana is Derek 
Joubert, the country's leading chronicler of big cats. 

"I've been studying lions in northern Botswana for 20 years and watching them 
systematically decline in population size and health primarily, perhaps even 
solely, as the result of hunting," he said. 
"We've also seen some bizarre situations arising. Hunters target the primary 
males. When they disappear the male cubs don't leave the pride, they're not 
chased out. So we've seen these young males breeding with their sisters and 
their mothers because the trophy males have been killed." 

Mr Joubert estimates that the number of lions in Botswana has declined by 
about two-thirds in 10 years. That is average for the continent. 

Exact numbers of lions are notoriously difficult to measure but there is 
broad consensus among conservationists and governments that the population in 
Africa has fallen from about 50,000 to less than 15,000 over the past decade. 
The surviving lions are largely confined to four viable populations in 
southern and east Africa. 

Peasant farmers also had a hand in the Botswana ban. The government had 
already forbidden them to shoot lions that attack cattle. The farmers said it 
was unfair to permit rich hunters to go on killing lions for sport when 
peasants were prevented from protecting their precious livestock. 

"There's no other reason to shoot a lion other than ego. As a hunter you want 
to feel great so you can hang it on the wall and your mates say: 'Wow, what a 
man'," Mr Joubert said. "I'm not particularly anti-hunting. I can't 
personally see the point in going out and shooting a lion. But I do have a 
problem with the ethics of it and the sustainability of it." 

The nature of lion hunting has changed from colonial days. Faster vehicles 
and high powered rifles have further reduced the already bad odds against the 
animals. On top of that, the idea of three week hunts deep into the bush in 
the hope, but not necessarily the expectation, of bagging something big have g
iven way to the concept of a sure kill. 

"It's very difficult for a professional hunter to turn around to some guy 
who's paid $30,000 to kill a lion and say: 'Don't shoot that one he's too 
young, he's not ready'. The guy's going to say, I came here to kill a lion 
and that's what I'm going to do," said Mr Joubert. 

At least there is still something of the hunt left in Botswana. South Africa 
offers the notorious "canned lion" service in which a trapped animal is 
virtually delivered to the barrel of a gun. 

Many of the lions are bred in captivity solely as bait for hunters and then 
hardly pursued at all. They are released into what are no more than fields 
surrounded by fences and "hunted". They have no chance of escape. 
On one occasion captured on video a lioness was separated from her cubs and 
shot just yards away. Last year a pride of problem lions - they had been 
eating livestock - in the state-owned Kruger National Park was sold to a 
hunting tour operator for delivery to his clients. 

Tales of horrendous suffering by the animals abound. Some supposed hunters 
are so inexpert with guns that they take a dozen shots to kill a lion. 

Sometimes the killing takes place on the same game farms that foreign 
tourists believe to be conservation centres. While the parks emphasise the 
breeding of lions to the visitors waving cameras, over the hill the hunters 
are shooting them with guns. The state-run South African tourist board even 
advertised "canned lion" hunts. 

"Go for the ultimate trophy and score in South Africa," said one advert. "It 
is always in season in South Africa, where the world's finest hunting is in 
the bag." 

Opponents of the ban in Botswana say it will have a big effect on the local 
economy. Lion hunting is estimated to be worth about £3m a year but most of 
the profits go to hunting operators. 

The government earns just £1,500 for each lion bagged, a fraction of what the 
hunter pays, even though all hunting takes place on state-owned reserves and 
the animals are the property of the government. 

Safari Club International, which calls itself a "charitable organisation of 
hunter conservationists" with 33,000 members across the globe, is unlikely to 
get its way. The tide appears to have swung against lion hunting in Botswana 
and conservationists are confident that when the ban comes up for review in a 
year it will be reimposed. 

While SCI mobilises politicians, other prominent voices have spoken up in 
favour of the ban on lion hunting. Among those who have written to Botswana's 
wildlife department in support is the actor Kevin Costner, star of Dances 
with Wolves, about the devastating impact of hunting on America's bison 
population. 
SCI referred questions about lions in Botswana and the prominent support for 
a lifting of the hunting ban to its chief executive, Rudy Rosen, who was not 
available. 

But Gen Schwarzkopf is clearly a valued member. The organisation recently 
donated $10,000 in the general's name to a Grizzly bear information project. 
Under threat from the gun

Rhinos 

There were once hundreds of species but only five exist today and four of 
them are endangered. During the 1970s as many as half the world's remaining 
rhinos disappeared. Now fewer than 12,000 survive in Asia and Africa. The 
northern white rhino is reduced to only 30 individuals in the wild. In Africa 
poaching has been so ruthless that black rhino numbers have fallen from 
60,000 to 2,500 in 22 years. Horn from African rhinos is worth£1,300 to 
£3,300 per kg, and horn from Asian rhinos up to £32,000 per kg. 

Elephants

The demand for ivory was behind the decline of the African elephant, which 
fell from 2m animals in 1970 to between 286,000 and 543,000 today. 
The number of Asian elephants have been reduced to between 34,000 and 51,000 
animals in the wild. Hunting for meat, hides and bones has affected both 
breeds. 

Orang Utans

Fewer than 30,000 exist in the world today, a 30% to 50% decline which has 
occurred in the past decade. The vast majority can be found in Borneo, where 
they are protected. Hunting for food and body parts has taken its toll and 
the trade in body parts, particularly skulls, continues despite the efforts 
of the authorities to eradicate it. 

Tigers

A population estimate in 1996 was between 4,600 and 7,200 in the wild, and 
there are now no more than 4,500 Indian tigers. The Siberian tiger is the 
world's largest cat but only 200 remain, mostly in Russia. The demand for 
tiger products has increased with the bones and other body parts being used 
for traditional Chinese medicines and as tonics or cures for ailments. 
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
=========CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
=======================================================================Archives 
Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
=======================================================================To subscribe to 
Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to