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Calling for an end to trophy hunting

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220 New Zealand supporters and 35 international travel agencies joined our calls for the South African government to stop trophy hunting.

Together we’re calling for an end to the hunting of lions and other wild animals in South Africa by tourists. 

35 travel agencies including Expedia, Booking.com and TripAdvisor, have sent a letter to the South African government calling for trophy hunting a thing of the past in the country.

So-called ‘trophy hunters’ shoot more than 800 lions in South africa each year.

Ambushed and slaughtered, they’re often left to bleed out, suffering an agonising and demeaning death. Then they’re skinned and decapitated and turned into ‘trophies’.

You funded new polling that shows that international tourists are distancing themselves from this bloody tourist “sport”. 

In the survey, 84% of the international tourists surveyed said that the South African government should prioritize animal-friendly tourism over trophy hunting. And 74% of respondents believed that trophy hunting had a direct negative effect on the country's reputation as a travel destination.

Wildlife-friendly tourism is a better alternative

Transforming the current trophy hunting industry into a more wildlife-friendly alternative will benefit both the animals and the country. 

South Africa has beautiful nature and rich wildlife, which should be experienced with wildlife-friendly alternatives that can both generate income from the tourism industry and ensure better lives for lions.

Here are just three national parks with lion prides to visit in South Africa:

  1. Kruger National Park

The greater park area is home to an estimated 1,800 lions.

  1. Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park

Home to about 40 prides of the legendary black-maned lion

  1. Hluhluwe–iMfolozi Park

A small but growing population of 120 lions call these combined parks home.

South Africa has beautiful nature and rich wildlife, which should be experienced with wildlife-friendly alternatives that can both generate income from the tourism industry and ensure better lives for lions.

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