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Food funds dry up, SA lions face death

Grr! No feed
Last Updated 09 March 2010, 15:38 IST
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The SanWild sanctuary, in Limpopo province, has issued an urgent appeal for donations to save the three prides of 14 adults and two cubs.

Officials have warned that if the sanctuary cannot meet the 45,000 rand (£4,000) monthly cost of meat to keep the lions healthy it will be forced to have them put down — possibly as soon as next month.

“The situation on the ground for our lions is dire and unless we don’t urgently find sponsorship, the lions will have to be put down,” Louise Joubert, founder trustee of SanWild, said. “We can’t allow them to start starving. We would rather euthanise them than let them end up as a trophy on some hunter’s wall.”

The eight males and eight females have lived at the sanctuary, near Tzaneen, since 2003 and 2004 after being rescued from the canned hunting industry in which animals are usually bred in captivity to be hunted in a confined space.

Each pride now lives in a 15-acre enclosure. Each animal requires 4-5 kg of meat per day and would be unable to fend for itself in the wild. All the males have been sterilised to prevent breeding.

“They are stunning lions,” Joubert said. “But last year, due the worldwide recession, we really battled to get funding for them. We’ve managed to keep them going until the end of March, but we’re really desperate to get people to adopt the lions or provide sponsorship on a monthly basis. Small donations do make a difference.” She said SanWild was bringing a case against the government next week over what it claims are broken promises of financial support.

The South African courts are reviewing rules that could effectively ban the canned hunting industry, which kills an estimated 1,000 lions a year. However, such a move would raise the prospect of thousands of lions being put down because they cannot be released into the wild and there are insufficient resources in parks or reserves.

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(Published 09 March 2010, 15:38 IST)

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