Lion Poaching

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Peter Betts
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Re: Lions' Paws Cut Off by Poachers - Graphic

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Do a Trump and obliterate Massingir Town ..but that wont happen so Lion are threatened now big time ..My Grootvlei Pride spends a few months a year on the Moz side up north


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Re: Lion Poaching

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Two arrested with lion's head kept in police custody

13 December 2021 - 21:21
Ernest Mabuza Journalist


The two people who were arrested by the Hawks in the North West for possession of a lion's head made their first court appearance on Monday.

Two people who were found in possession of a lion's head made their first appearance before the Zeerust magistrate's court on Monday.

The court postponed the case against Joseph Modime, 59, and Emily Mashaba, 54, until Monday for the verification of their addresses. They are charged with contravening the National Environmental Management Biodiversity Act.

The National Prosecuting Authority said the suspects were arrested after an intelligence tip-off that resulted in a sting operation by the Mahikeng-based Serious Organised Crime Investigation team from the Hawks, the Lehurutshe K9 unit, the Zeerust Stock Theft Unit and members from the department of forestry, fisheries and environment.

The Hawks reported that the two suspects were travelling from Thembisa seeking a traditional healer to sell the lion’s head to for R350,000.

.“A police agent intercepted the sale by arranging a traditional healer and the suspects were arrested at a petrol station in Zeerust.”

A lion’s head was found in their possession, wrapped in refuse bags.

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https://www.sowetanlive.co.za/news/sout ... e-custody/


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Re: Lion Poaching

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Two caught with a lion’s head in their possession released on bail

by Corné van Zyl | 20-12-2021

Two people who were arrested with a lion’s head in their possession in Zeerust earlier this month appeared in the Zeerust Magistrates’ Court on Monday.

THE TWO WILL BE BACK IN COURT NEXT MONTH

According to National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) spokesperson Henry Mamothame, the accused Joseph Modime (59) and Emily Mashaba(54) were granted bail.

“The suspects’ Modime and Mashaba in a lion’s head case were granted bail of R1500 each, and the matter was postponed to 16 February 2022 for further investigations,” he said.

THEY WERE GRANTED BAIL OF A R1500 EACH

He added that after verifying their addresses, the court granted them bail under strict conditions.

“They should refrain from interacting with state witnesses, they should avail themselves on their next court appearance but failure to do so will result in a warrant of arrest being issued against them,” Mamothame said.

WHAT CHARGES DO THEY FACE?

They were both charged with the contravention of the National Environmental Management Biodiversity Act 10 of 2004 (NEMBA) after they were caught in possession of a lion’s head.

“Their court appearance emanates from their arrest following an intelligence tip-off that resulted in a sting operation by the Mahikeng based Serious Organised Crime Investigation team from the Directorate For Priority Crime Investigation (HAWKS), Lehurutshe K9, Zeerust Stock Theft Unit and members from the Department of Forestry, Fisheries, and Environment,” he said.

WHAT HAPPENED THAT LED UP TO THEIR ARRESTS?

Mamothame said the HAWKS reported that the two suspects were travelling from Tembisa in Johannesburg, seeking a traditional healer to sell the lion’s head to for an amount of R350 000.

The report further indicated that this sale was intercepted by a police agent who arranged a traditional healer, leading to the arrest of the two at a petrol station in Zeerust. A lion’s head was found in their possession, wrapped in refuse bags.

Further investigations by the HAWKS are underway after they seized the lion’s head from the suspects.


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Re: Lion Poaching

Post by Falanajerido1 »

Sad killing lions i am hurting them they get bail and no justice something need to be done i love lion start placing them in jail


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Re: Lion Poaching

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KRUGER LIONS BEING POISONED BY POACHERS FOR BODY PARTS, SAYS SANPARKS

Ed Stoddard - Daily Maverick, 13.07.2023.

Image
A pair of male lions in the Kruger National Park. (Photo: Gallo Images / Chris Daphne)

South African National Parks has confirmed that lions have been targeted in a poisoning campaign in the northern Kruger Park by poachers seeking the animals’ body parts, presumably for the muti trade. The numbers are not huge, but in the wake of the rhino poaching onslaught, the targeting of another charismatic species in the iconic park will set off alarm bells among conservationists.

South African National Parks (SANParks) confirmed the poisonings in response to queries from Daily Maverick.

“For the period January 2020 up until the end of June 2023, a total of eight lions were found poisoned in the Xanatseni north region of the Kruger National Park. A further six lions were killed in snares over the same period,” SANParks said in an emailed response.

It said all the poisoning cases had been reported to the police and were being investigated by SANParks Environmental Crime Investigations Unit.

“Although the poisoning of lions is targeted, with various body parts of the animals removed, snaring remains indiscriminate and many different species are killed in snares,” SANParks said.

“In the last six months – January 2023 to June 2023 – a total of 1,987 snares have been removed on the Xanatseni north region which comprises the Pafuri, Punda Maria, Shingwedzi, Vlakteplaas, Shangoni and Woodlands sections,” it said.

This, it must be said, hardly compares with the wave of poaching that has seen thousands of rhinos killed for their horns in the Kruger over the past 15 years, decimating the population by up to 75% between 2011 and 2021.

The death of 14 lions – with eight known to have been targeted specifically for body parts, pointing to the trade in muti or traditional medicine, which highly prizes wild animal anatomy – over a period of three-and-half years is not a material threat to the park’s overall population of around 1,500 to 1,700 lions.

Shot across the bows

Still, when there is demand for such a product, criminal syndicates will find a way to poach and profit from it, so it is a warning shot across Kruger’s bows.

There is also a demand for lion bones in Asia, which South African captive-bred lions have been feeding.

That could potentially put wild cats in reserves with abundant populations in the cross-hairs in South Africa, which has well-established illegal trade routes to Asia for rhino horn and a host of other illegal stuff such as gold.

Just look at what the demand for rhino horn in Asia for a range of purposes – from medicinal to ornamental – has done to the pachyderm population. The tsunami of rhino poaching that has swept Kruger, an area the size of Israel that is difficult to secure and patrol, began as a ripple.

SANParks said it was being proactive about the situation.

“Considerable efforts are being made to monitor the lions in the far north of the park and SANParks is working closely with EWT (Endangered Wildlife Trust) to fit monitoring and tracking collars on the remaining prides,” it said.

“Field rangers also patrol areas which are known ‘hot spots’ for snaring, and routinely remove any snares which they locate. SANParks honorary rangers also conduct dedicated snare patrols in known hot-spot areas and make a significant contribution in removing snares, as well as recording relevant information for SANParks (types of snares such as wire or cable, GPS locations, age of snares etc).”

Translocations between the south of the park, which has a relatively robust population, and the north have also taken place. “The good performance of lions in southern Kruger is resulting in males and prides leaving the park looking for alternative territories. Often these move into areas where they could come into conflict with people,” SANParks said.

Human/wildlife conflict is simply not good for people or big critters.

“Proactively removing lions in the south that have left the park provides the opportunity to assist with the colonisation process in northern Kruger. This suggests that management can overcome disruptions caused by snaring and poisoning by introducing lions from southern Kruger while addressing the criminality of illegal harvesting of lions,” SANParks said.

“For this reason, SANParks introduced three prides and two males. A coalition of 12 males that naturally colonised, however, disrupted the newly introduced prides after about a year since the initiative started, resulting in several deaths.”

Complex dynamics

This highlights the complex ecological dynamics at play in a wildlife reserve that is subject to human management and interventions.

Hopefully, SANParks initiatives such as collaring and scrutiny of hot spots will nip this menace in the bud. The park hardly needs a new massacre of megafauna. But the social and economic context is challenging, to say the least.

Kruger is like an island of wildlife encircled by a growing sea of human poverty. The indiscriminate snaring points to trade in bushmeat, as well as perhaps muti, and anyone who ventures into the park to set snares probably doesn’t have a well-paying day job.

Having said that, some Kruger staff with regular salaries are also on the take – or vulnerable to the threats of criminal syndicates – enabling corruption to continue undermining the park’s capacity to confront poaching.

“For more than a decade, Kruger National Park has faced a relentless onslaught of rhino poaching. But today its greatest threat is internal corruption, itself a symptom of a breakdown in trust, staff cohesion and professionalism within the park,” researcher Julian Rademeyer notes in a report earlier this year, Landscapes of Fear, for the European Union-funded crime response organisation, Enact.

Protecting wildlife in the Kruger, from lions to rhinos to impalas threatened by snares, is no walk in the park. DM

Original article: https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article ... -sanparks/


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Re: Lion Poaching

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Zimparks ranger arrested for poaching and mutilating US$ 60K lions at Hwange National Park


A ZIMBABWE National Parks and Wildlife Management Authority ranger has been arrested on suspicion of being responsible for the shooting of the three lions that were found without heads and paws in Hwange National Park last week.

Hali Mabuya (39) who was working at Mtshibi Camp in Hwange National Park was found with a Point 458 service rifle that was allegedly used in the callous killing of the three big cats and 52 live rounds of ammunition.
About 30 of the rounds had not been issued to him by the employer.

Mabuya allegedly used a service rifle which was recovered from him while a bullet head found on the scene reportedly matched the gun.
The poaching was carried out between Monday and Tuesday last week.

Mabuya was linked to the offence after he approached a workmate in the armoury department and asked her to alter dates in respect of when he had signed for and returned the Point 458 Rifle.
This prompted investigations which led to his arrest.

The carcasses were found near Dom Pan waterhole in the giant park and each had gunshot wounds on shoulders while some tyre marks and footprints were seen on the scene, raising suspicions of the presence of a poaching syndicate.
Mabuya appeared before Hwange magistrate Ms Fungai Dzimbiri on Saturday facing a count of unlawful hunting after Contravening Section 24 (1) (b) As read With Section 24 (2) of the Parks and Wildlife Act and another of unlawful possession of ammunition without a firearm certificate, a contravention of Section 4 (1) as read with Section 2 of the Firearms Act.

Mabuya, who was represented by Ms Joyline Change of Mvhiringi and Associates, was remanded in custody to November 1.
The State suspects that there could be poaching syndicates involving rangers.
Prosecuting, Ms Jemesina Makanza said Mabuya unlawfully hunted and killed one collared gestating lioness, another female lioness and one male lion using a Point 458 rifle and went away unnoticed.
“On 22 October at 9am the accused approached his workmate who works at armoury and asked her to change the dates when he returned the rifle which had been issued on 20 August. The request prompted some investigations leading to the recovery of the carcasses with bullet wounds,” said Ms Makanza in court.

The court was told that the Point 458 bullet heads were recovered on the scene.
The gun was found in his possession.
Further searches led to the recovery of eight rounds of the Point 458 rifle in Mabuya’s black satchel,
15 more rounds of a Point 458 rifle, nine rounds of a Point 416, 11 rounds of a Point 373 rifle, one round of a Point 308 rifle, one round of gragnoff rifle, one round of a Point 223 rifle as well as 12 by 7 bore.

In total there were 52 live rounds recovered from Mabuya, and 30 rounds a Point 458 had not been issued to him by the employer, raising fears of a long standing poaching expedition.
The lions were valued at US$60 000.
The incident invokes memories of killing of another collared and famous lion called Cecil in June 2015 by Walter Palmer, an American dentist and recreational game hunter from Minnesota who reportedly paid US$50 000 to a local professional hunter and guide Theo Bronkhorst to kill the 13-year-old cat that had a Geographic Position System (GPS) micro-chip on its neck.
Cecil the lion was being used for research.

The killers had lured Cecil to the border of Hwange National Park and Gwayi Conservancy on Mr Honest Ndlovu land where they shot and injured him with an arrow from a crossbow and later finished him off with a rifle after tracking him for 40 hours.
Cecil was also beheaded and rangers found the carcass with no GPS tracking collar and head.

The killing drew international media attention and sparked outrage among animal conservationists and celebrities against Palmer.

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Re: Lion Poaching

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The lions were valued at US$60 000.
A lion is not a piece of jewellery @#$

Mabuya is not only cruel and unempathetic but also stupid 0*\


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