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Zimbabwe:Ban on hunting to affect tourism
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http://www.zimbabwesituation.c...sm-newsday-zimbabwe/


Ban on hunting to affect tourism

Posted on January 18, 2016 by ZimSitRep_M —


via Ban on hunting to affect tourism – NewsDay Zimbabwe January 18, 2016

A RECENT United States ban on lion hunting will have a negative effect on the local hunting industry which generated $45 million in 2014.

BY TATIRA ZWINOIRA

Recently, the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USWFS) listed two lion subspecies under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). The two species are found in India and western and central Africa and Eastern and Southern Africa. The US government has to approve the listing for the ban to be effected.

Zimbabwe Council of Tourism (ZCT) president Francis Ngwenya said the ban would have an impact on the country’s tourism industry.


“The ZCT is disappointed by the ban on hunting products recently announced in the United States of America, as this will have a negative impact on Zimbabwe. It is the ZCT’s belief that controlled hunting is an important part of the wildlife management programme in this country,” Ngwenya said.

“It is our fear that the ban will impact on the hunting industry, with consequent negative impacts on employment, income generation and wild life conservation.”

The United States is the biggest market for the local hunting industry ahead of Canada. If hunting products are banned it is expected other countries will follow suit.

Lion hunting in Zimbabwe is the biggest attraction and contributor to the hunting industry.

Zimbabwe Tour Operators Association chairperson Wengayi Nhau said tour operators that sell hunting packages will be the most affected.

“The ban could have catastrophic repercussions for tour operators that offer hunting packages as the clientele is the United States market. So if they stop the importation of hunting products, United States hunters will not come here,” Nhau said.

“So there will be no motivation to hunt in the first place as hunters will not be able to take back what they have hunted.
Hunting tour operators will lose out on money which will set a bad precedent for the industry.”

He said these operators will be forced to look for new sources of revenue.

The ban on hunting products came after an American hunter shot and killed ‘Cecil the Lion’ who was a popular attraction in Zimbabwe to tourists due to his plentiful mane.

It also comes barely two years after the USWFS suspended imports of sport-hunted African elephant trophies from Zimbabwe and Tanzania over alleged questionable management practices.

Wildlife conservation is governed by the Zimbabwe National Parks and Wildlife Management Authority which is an autonomous body that has to raise its own revenues to fund operations with hunting revenues contributing a huge chunk.

Areas to be affected by the ban within the hunting industry apart from products sold as a result of hunting will include employment, income generation and wildlife conservation. Zimbabwe’s wildlife conservation relies mainly on income generated from the hunting industry.

Meanwhile, ZCT will next month hold the 2016 Tourism Convention in Victoria Falls between February 10 to 12.

The hunting industry will be one of the many topics under travel and tourism at the Tourism Convention 2016 which seeks to encourage active involvement with people, government, and organisations within the tourism and travel sector from the local, regional and international sectors.

Other issues to be discussed at the convention include Minister of Tourism Walter Mzembi’s goal of achieving a $5 billion tourism economy.

Winnie Muchanyuka, Board of Airlines Representatives chairperson said upgrades and infrastructure development must be looked into to offer world class standards.

Her organisation consists of all the country heads of different airlines.

“Pertinent infrastructure development must be looked into to ensure upgrades are done at world class standards,” she said.


Kathi

kathi@wildtravel.net
708-425-3552

"The world is a book, and those who do not travel read only one page."
 
Posts: 9500 | Location: Chicago | Registered: 23 July 2003Reply With Quote
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Too bad the idiot politicians and their flunkies who instigated this lion ban can't spend a few nights out in the bush with wild lions.

Might make them rethink their "knee jerk" response to the anti-hunting establishment.

BH63


Hunting buff is better than sex!
 
Posts: 2205 | Registered: 29 December 2015Reply With Quote
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http://allafrica.com/stories/201601220644.html


Zimbabwe: U.S Restricts African Lion Trophies

By Kudzai Kuwaza


Restrictions imposed on imports of lion trophies from Africa to the United States will compound local safari operators' woes, reeling from a 30% revenue loss last year, businessdigest has learnt.

The US Fish and Wildlife Service imposed new restrictions on African lions harvested after January 22 2016 particularly lions from southern and eastern Africa.

Lions from southern and eastern African countries are considered "threatened with extinction". Hunters from these areas cannot import a trophy into the US without first getting a US import permit, in addition to a Cites export permit.

Before issuing permits for importation of trophies of lions in southern and eastern Africa, the US will have to make a determination that the hunting of the lion and the importation of the trophy into the US will "enhance the survival" of lions in the wild. Safari Operators Association of Zimbabwe chairman Emmanuel Fundira told businessdigest this week that the restrictions imposed on African lions from eastern and southern Africa were tantamount to a ban, adding this would discourage hunters from coming to Zimbabwe.

"The amount of restrictions is tantamount to a ban because of the cumbersome requirements which have alarmed our clients," he said.

Fundira said this was another blow for the industry and a "dark cloud in the sky" following the ban of imported ivory by the US agency in April last year.

He said government needs to urgently engage the agency to avoid the issue being blown into a full blown crisis for the sector. Safari operations last year suffered a 30% reduction in revenue owing to among other things, the continued ban on ivory hunting and the killing of the famous lion, Cecil.


Kathi

kathi@wildtravel.net
708-425-3552

"The world is a book, and those who do not travel read only one page."
 
Posts: 9500 | Location: Chicago | Registered: 23 July 2003Reply With Quote
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