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News
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Greenies and Canned hunting
      #1201 - 23/01/03 01:41 PM

Lions to Be Confiscated, Moved to Gauteng

South African Press Association
(Johannesburg)

January 21, 2003

Lydenburg

The pride of lions, imported illegally to a wildlife sanctuary near Lydenburg by wildlife activists claiming to have saved them from 'canned' hunting, are to be confiscated and moved to Gauteng on Wednesday by the Mpumalanga Parks Board.

MPB spokesman David Nkambule confirmed on Tuesday that the trustees of the Enkosini Wildlife Sanctuary had been notified of the confiscation, planned for Wednesday morning.

The confiscated animals were to be taken to a lion and rhino park in Gauteng.

Nkambule said this was in accordance with an earlier ruling of the Pretoria High Court, which denied an application by Enkosini for an interdict against confiscation.

Enkosini trustees Kelcey Grimm and Greg Mitchell, who own the eight lions, have until January 15 to move the lions out of Mpumalanga.

Nkambule said the parks board refused them permits to keep the animals due to insufficient facilities.

Animal rights activist Chris Mercer, who claims to represent 24 animal welfare organisations countrywide, said Enkosini was making a last-ditch effort to save the lions from the trauma of removal by bringing an urgent application in the Pretoria High Court on Tuesday afternoon.

According to Mercer, Enkosini was applying for an interim interdict preventing the removal of the lions pending the outcome of another court case.

In this case, set to be heard on February 4, Grimm and Mitchell ask for judicial review of the MPB's refusal to grant them permits to keep the eight lions at Enkosini.

Mercer condemned the planned confiscation and removal of the lions.

"Something really has to be done about the repressive administration and abuse of authority in our nature conservation services. The game plan of the officials is easily apparent. Once they can get the lions away from Enkosini, they can adopt delaying tactics to prevent the courts from getting to grips with the matter.

"We in the animal welfare community are constantly amazed at the lengths to which so many nature conservation officials are prepared to go to exclude the public from participating in wildlife management.

"The behaviour of nature conservation officials in such matters is much more consistent with that of para-military vigilantes than with that of public servants. By contrast, the same officials fall over themselves to issue a permit to shoot an animal, even if it was endangered," Mercer said.

Steve Smit of the organisation Justice for Animals, who opposes the planned confiscation, said the planned sedation and move over hundreds of kilometres would only serve to traumatise the animals and put them at risk of sedation-related fatalities.

Mitchell and Grimm bought the eight Enkosini lions from eastern Free State game ranch owner and predator breeder Marius Prinsloo.

Mitchell, who had worked at Prinsloo's ranch, feared that the animals were to fall prey to so-called 'canned' hunters.

The lions were then moved to temporary accommodation in the Johannesburg Zoo. After establishing the Enkosini Wildlife Sanctuary, Mitchell and Grimm moved them there, but without the required permits from the MPB.

They have fought a court battle for the past eight months to keep the animals there.


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News
.333 member


Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 315
Loc: Internet News
Re: Greenies and Canned hunting [Re: News]
      #1249 - 24/01/03 11:27 PM

A second article on the same subject - actually an earlier date

Ifaw: Mpumalanga Bungling Over Lions

South African Press Association - Johannesburg

January 15, 2003

The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) on Wednesday accused the Mpumalanga Parks Board (MPB) of bureaucratic bungling which was endangering the lives of eight lions.

IFAW said in a statement released in Cape Town that the MPB planned to confiscate the eight captive-bred lions only three weeks before a court case which could give the Enkosini Wildlife Sanctuary permission to keep them.

The lions were moved to Enkosini in 2001, but the MPB refused to give the sanctuary permits to import the lions into the province due to a 1997 moratorium on new projects involving captive-bred lions. Enkosini decided to challenge the MPB's decision in court and the case was due to be heard on February 4.

IFAW said the MPB now wanted to confiscate the lions and move them twice -- first to Johannesburg and then on to an undisclosed location.

"This decision to move the lions so indiscriminately is foolish and poorly thought out," said Kelcey Grimm, managing director of the Enkosini Wildlife Sanctuary.

"Why is it so urgent that the animals health and well-being should be compromised when, in just three weeks time on February 4, a high court application will review the MPB's decision not to give us permits to keep the lions at Enkosini and may well overturn that decision allowing the animals to remain."

Grimm said there were concerns that being tranquillised twice and transported would put the animals at risk.

The eight lions were part of a group of 10 that had been destined for so-called "canned" hunting. The animals were acquired from a game farm in the Free State and were taken to Enkosini outside Lydenburg in Mpumalanga.

Enkosini said it had met all of the MPB's predator specifications, including property size, fencing and health certificates for all the lions.

IFAW spokesman, Nthethe Raditapole, condemned the MPB's intended confiscation of the lions.

"Here we have eight animals who are literally refugees from the worst type of animal welfare abuses and the MPB is denying them sanctuary and the right to rehabilitation and, in fact, wants to subject them to the stress of this ill conceived move - not once, but twice," Raditapole said.

"IFAW can only encourage the MPB to cut through its own red tape and to put the welfare of the animals first -- at least until the outcome of the forthcoming court review has been heard and concluded."



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African News Headlines at a glance daily




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DUGABOY1
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Reged: 02/02/03
Posts: 1340
Loc: TEXAS USA
Re: Greenies and Canned hunting [Re: News]
      #1409 - 02/02/03 04:57 AM

It is funny when you hear these ARA Dimwitts scream about the game management people, not knowing anything about game management! Most of the PeTAheads, and ALFelons wouldn't know one end of a lion from the other, and tend to do far more harm than good!




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DUGABOY1, and MacD37 founding member of DRSS www.doublerifleshooterssociety.com
"If I die today, I have had a life well spent, for I've been to see the Elephant, and smelled the smoke of Africa!"

Edited by DUGABOY1 (02/02/03 05:12 AM)


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