Due to the
reserve’s large diversity of animals, the Sibuya Game Reserve in South Africa
has seen plenty of action from poachers over the last few years.
Recently
though, karma came calling for a group of poachers who broke into the reserve
in an effort to hunt rhinos. presumably, it seems the hunters became the hunted
after park rangers found the poachers remains the following morning.
Nick Fox,
who owns the park reckons that the poachers were eaten alive by the park’s
pride of lions, because there were only a few remains found, rangers couldn’t
be sure exactly how many of the poachers were killed.
Along with
the scant bodily remains, three pairs of men’s boots and three pairs of gloves
were recovered from the scene.
“The only body part we found was one skull and one bit of pelvis, everything else was completely gone.” said Fox.
Male lion
after a kill
Nick said it
was reported that an anti poaching dog was heard barking at about 4 am that
morning, the dog’s handler apparently heard activity from the lions but didn’t
think too much of it as it’s not unusual for the pride to be roaming the area
at that time.
During the
first rounds of the morning, rangers stumbled upon the grisly scene. Along with
the few human remains were a high powered rifle, wire cutters and an axe, which
Nick says is the typical kit of rhino poachers.
Sibuya Game
Reserve is situated within the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. It’s
thirty square mile boundaries are home to Lions, rhino, elephants, leopards and
buffalo.
The demand
for rhino horn is pretty high unfortunately. On the South African black market
the horn of a white rhino can reportedly fetch around $3,000 a pound and with a
typical horn weighing in from anywhere between two to eight pounds, there’s a
fair amount of illicit profit to be made.
Two rhino's
within the park
Subiya Game
Reserve
South Africa
is home to around eighty percent of the world’s thirty thousand rhino
population. Just over one thousand rhino were poached in South Africa last
year, according to the Department of Environmental Affairs.
After the
poachers were discovered, a search was undertaken for any remaining survivors.
Fox said:
“We found enough body parts and three pairs of empty shoes which suggest to us that the lions ate at least three of them but it is thick bush and there could be more.”
He added
that although the incident was sad, it should serve as a message to other
poachers who try to illegally hunt in the reserve.
He added:
“The lions are our watchers and guardians and they picked the wrong pride and
became a meal.”
I don’t know
about you but i’m struggling to find any sympathy for the poachers.
No sympathy at all for the poachers, they got just what they deserved and I hope they suffered
ReplyDeletea lot.
Lions don't eat their prey "Alive. They kill the prey, then eat it.
ReplyDeleteClick Bait headlines.
Good riddance ....serves them right.
ReplyDelete