ALL SMOKE AND MIRRORS
THE NEW CANNED HUNTING REGULATIONS by CHRIS MERCER.
Co author of the Books:
“For the Love of Wildlife” and “Canned Lion Hunting - A National Disgrace”
I believe that the new hunting regulations are nothing but an elaborate public relations exercise. These regulations were to be expected from such a panel of hunters and non-experts, as I warned the hundreds of people who I addressed when I toured U.K. recently in order to expose the institutionalised cruelty to animals that is called Conservation in South Africa.
The two new government publications, one on general hunting standards, and one on, inter alia, large predators, are fundamentally flawed in two critical respects:
First, there was never any intention to stop the cruelty, so what we have is a formula of pious, unenforceable aspirations, all designed to stifle public criticism. But it is the cruelty which offends the public, and until that is addressed by a complete ban on all trophy hunting, international pressure will continue to mount against South Africa.
Second, the attempt to infiltrate hunting industry notions of fair chase into biodiversity protection is transparently flawed. All trophy hunting is genetically and environmentally devastating, whether the hunter shoots like a colonial fop from a vehicle, or like Rambo on foot after a long stalk. The result is the same, pain and death for the animal, and a loss of biodiversity. You cannot love or respect Nature with a gun. And nowhere do the new regulations/standards recognise that trophy hunting causes stunting in species. Compare the slight Karoo springbok and Cape Leopard (who have been hunted hard for 350 years) with their much larger Kalahari cousins (who have only been hunted hard for 50 years).
The new regulations certainly look very impressive on paper, but just look who is going to enforce them - the very same conservation officials who have caused the problem in the first place. As Einstein reminds us “problems can never be solved at the level at which they were created”. I for one would have no problem getting around them, especially if I had cronies in the conservation services, and I am sure that many lion breeders are much smarter than me.
Nothing less than sweeping out of our conservation services all the hunting thugs who wear conservation uniforms will stop the cruelty. Expecting such officials to enforce the new restrictions is as absurd as asking Al Capone’s henchmen to monitor his activities. This is simply industry self- regulation in a new disguise.
So far from stopping the cruelty, the new regulations seek to extend the grisly business of killing wildlife for profit to black empowerment groups. Our nation and this world need fewer killers, not more.
There is a major moral issue here, which is being studiously ignored - whether the infliction of suffering and death upon unoffending animals for fun is acceptable. If it is criminal to beat a dog or a donkey, why should trophy hunters be allowed to do much worse to other animals?
As for the Minister’s fine rhetoric about the new regulations being ‘the end of canned hunting,’ I predict that his extravagant boast is going to suffer the same fate as George W Bush’s boast three years ago that ‘the war in Iraq is over.’ Forget fair chase, Minister. Just stop the cruelty.