Hunter Theo
Bronkhorst (left) and landowner Honest Ndlovu are facing poaching charges
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A Zimbabwean court on Wednesday charged a professional hunter
with failing to prevent an American from unlawfully killing 'Cecil', the
southern African country's best-known lion, in a case that has triggered
widespread revulsion at trophy hunting.
The American, Walter
James Palmer, a Minnesota dentist who paid US$50,000 to kill the lion, has left
Zimbabwe. He says he did kill the animal but believed the hunt was legal.
Local hunter Theo
Bronkhorst appeared in a courthouse in Hwange, 800 km (500 miles) west of
Harare, and was charged with "failing to supervise, control and take
reasonable steps to prevent an unlawful hunt".
He pleaded not guilty to
the charge and was set free after posting US$1,000 bail and depositing his
passport with the court. He will return to court on Aug. 5 for trial.
Game park owner Honest
Ndlovu, who is also accused of assisting Palmer, was not charged on Wednesday
and parks officials said he would first testify for the state and be charged
later.
While Bronkhorst appeared
in court in Zimbabwe, Palmer, who is accused of killing Cecil with a bow and
arrow, was being pilloried on the Internet, with many people wishing him dead.
"This is disgusting.
I hope you get thrown in a cage with hungry lions," Julie Lu wrote on the
Facebook page of his dental practice.
Walter Palmer (pictured
in red shorts) has previously been fined for lying to authorities about where
he shot dead a bear in Wisconsin
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Palmer said on Tuesday he
had hired professional guides who secured hunting permits and deeply regretted
taking the lion. He added that he had not been contacted by authorities in
Zimbabwe or the United States and would assist in any inquiries.
The Zimbabwe police and
government have not commented.
If found guilty,
Bronkhorst could be fined US$20,000 and possibly jailed for up to 10 years.
CUB INFANTICIDE
Cecil was fitted with a
GPS collar for a research project by scientists from Oxford University and was
one of the oldest and most famous in Zimbabwe.
The university's Wildlife
Conservation Research Unit said it had been tracking Cecil since 2008 and was
"deeply saddened" by his death.
"Insofar as this
happened illegally we consider it deeply reprehensible," it said in a
statement. It was working closely with Zimbabwe's National Parks authorities to
support their "meticulous work" in prosecuting the case.
The unit also said
Cecil's death would be likely to trigger a power struggle in the pride,
resulting in the death of other male lions as well as Cecil's offspring.
"When a male lion is
killed, because of the way their society works, a likely consequence is the
overthrow and death of other adult male members of his weakened coalition, and
the subsequent infanticide of his cubs," it said.
Palmer's hunting has
attracted scrutiny in the past. In 2008, he pleaded guilty to lying to a U.S.
wildlife agent about a black bear he killed in Wisconsin two years before.
He was accused of killing
it 40 miles outside a permitted zone, hauling the carcass back into the
approved area and certifying falsely that it was killed there. He was sentenced
to one year probation and fined US$2,938.
In the Hwange case,
Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force chairman Johnny Rodrigues said Cecil was lured
out of the park with bait before being shot.
The incident has
triggered fierce debate over the commercial 'trophy' hunting of African big
game.
Like many countries,
Zimbabwe issues annual permits that allow foreign hunters to kill wildlife such
as elephant, buffalo and lion legally, arguing that the funds raised allow the
government to fund conservation efforts.
"Sustainable trophy
hunting is part of well-managed wildlife conservation. It creates incentives
for people to look after wildlife," said Adri Kitshoff, chief executive of
the Professional Hunters' Association of South Africa.
"It's easy to fall
into the trap of emotions and not focus on facts."
However, Edward Bourke,
chairman of the Australia-based Saving The Lion Foundation, said Cecil's death
showed the dangers of legal hunting.
"There is enough
global pressure to push for change. There is an opportunity to offer
alternatives, including international aid for establishing safe haven
environments like national parks or eco-tourism zones," he said.
One of the few countries
to avoid Cecil hysteria was Zimbabwe, where most people are more preoccupied
with putting food on the table and finding work in an economy suffering 80
percent unemployment.
To the state-run Herald
newspaper, the most remarkable aspect of the case was the lion's name, which it
linked to British imperialist Cecil Rhodes, after whom the former Rhodesia
named.
"How someone thought
it such a good idea to christen a lion after the infamous plunderer and
murderer who roamed dangerously across Africa can only be a matter of
conjecture," it said in an editorial.
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