World

Trophy-hunters win prizes for using ‘cruel’ bows as lion population drops on anniversary of Cecil’s death

Western trophy-hunters are increasingly being encouraged to use bows and arrows, which prolong the suffering of a dying animal, experts have revealed.

One industry prize awards hunters for shooting 24 different species using four different methods – a rifle, a revolver, a crossbow and a muzzle-loader.

Being hit by a bow and arrow is “deliberate torture” because it leads to a slow, painful death for species such as lions, elephants, bears and giraffes, campaigners said.

They exposed the new trend in the trophy-hunting industry on the seventh anniversary of the death of Cecil, the Zimbabwean lion who was killed by a bow and arrow fired by US dentist Walter Palmer in 2015.

The deadly incentives for wiping out wildlife are revealed in a major report for MPs, based on investigations into trophy-hunting – killing animals for pleasure and saving their body parts.

One prize, the Safari Club International global hunting diamond award, is given to those who shoot at least 17 species in Africa, 13 species in North America, six in Asia, six in Europe, four in South America and a further four in the South Pacific.

Yet some of the world’s wildlife is “on its last legs”, the report warns, with wild lion numbers thought to potentially have dropped below 10,000 for the first time. Lions could vanish from the wild altogether by 2050, it’s feared, unless the decline is halted.

Linda Park, who works undercover in the captive lion-hunting industry, writes: “Cecil was left in agony for 11 hours after he was shot with a bow.

“There was another lion recently, Mopane, who was shot in the same area and was reportedly left for 24 hours.

“Encouraging hunters to shoot large animals such as lions with handguns and bows has enormous welfare implications.

“Bow hunting is incredibly cruel and yet it is an increasingly popular form of trophy hunting. It is anything but a clean kill and the animal will generally bleed out.”

Eduardo Goncalves, founder of the Campaign to Ban Trophy Hunting, said: “It’s a form of deliberate torture. And it wasn’t the exception – it’s increasingly the norm and is deliberately fuelled by the industry and these prizes.

”This is happening on an industrial scale. The majority are dying in a slow, excruciatingly painful way.”

The killing in 2015 of 13-year-old Cecil the lion at a Zimbabwean national park by the US dentist drove a rise in public revulsion at trophy-hunting.

The report, by all-party parliamentary group on trophy-hunting, says trophy-hunters shoot an animal every three minutes in the world, and at that rate, it is estimated they could kill up to 170 million animals this century at a time when the UN has warned a million species could die out.

Cecil’s killing sparked international condemnation

The 278-page document sounds the alarm over the path to extinction facing lions, polar bears, elephants, giraffes, rhinos and leopards.

The report says there could now be as few as 9,610 lions, down from an estimated 200,000 in the 1970s; 6,674 cheetahs and 3,142 black rhinos left in the wild. Trophy hunting is said to account for up to a quarter of the decline.

Several lion populations have vanished in the past six years, the document reveals. “US government officials warn lions could vanish from the wild altogether by 2050, making it the first disappearance of a big cat since the prehistoric sabre-tooth tiger.”

Professor Phyllis Lee, emeritus professor at the University of Stirling and member of the House of Lords elephant welfare group, writes: “You can end up creating problem animals by trophy hunting. Animals who have experienced harassment from humans tend to retaliate with more aggression…

Walter Palmer (left) pictured with another of his kills



Over 500 body parts taken from endangered animals have come into Britain since the government said it would ban them

MP Sir Roger Gale

Xural.com

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