Tuesday 25 August 2020

Double Standards for double races : Brittany L. killed a male leopard in his prime and got a trophy but Felix Byamukama killed 25 year old Rafiki(Gorilla) and was jailed for 11 years

 

 

 


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This is Brittany L. She killed this male leopard in his prime. According to SCI (Safari Club International) this leopard ranks as potentially the 9th largest leopard ever hunted.

Trophy Hunters score higher points for killing the biggest survivors! That goes against natures laws of survival of the fittest

This trophy hunter, for example, stalked and killed this magnificent male leopard in his prime, with a high powered weapon.

This 'trophy' will score high points on the hunting club score board.

Most would find catching a glimps of such a beautiful animal in the wild would take their breath away. Trophy hunters find taking their life away for fun is the biggest thrill!

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Killer of Rafiki, Uganda's rare silverback mountain gorilla, jailed

  • 30 July 2020
     Rafiki


Image copyright Uganda Wildlife Authority
Image caption Rafiki was thought to be 25 years old when he died

The killer of one of Uganda's best known mountain gorillas, Rafiki, has been jailed for 11 years.
Felix Byamukama pleaded guilty to illegally entering a protected area and killing a gorilla.
Byamukama had said the gorilla attacked him and he killed Rafiki in self defence, according to the Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA).

Mountain gorillas are endangered with just over 1,000 in existence and the UWA said "Rafiki has received justice".

Byamukama also pleaded guilty to killing a small antelope, known as a duiker, and a bush pig, as well as being in possession of bush pig and duiker meat.

He admitted to the UWA previously that he, and three others, had gone to Bwindi Impenetrable National Park with the intention of hunting smaller animals and that he killed Rafiki in self-defence when he was attacked.

Investigations showed Rafiki was killed by a sharp object that penetrated his internal organs.
The gorilla went missing on 1 June and his body was discovered by a search party the following day.
A UWA team tracked Byamukama to a nearby village, where he was found with hunting equipment.
Three others denied the charges and have been remanded in jail, awaiting trial.

Byamukama will serve several sentences concurrently, leading to 11 years in jail which falls far short of the life sentence it was predicted he could have been given.
This was because he was not tried in a special wildlife court, a UWA spokesperson told the BBC.

Image copyright Uganda Wildlife Authority
Image caption There are just over 1,000 mountain gorillas left in existence
The silverback, believed to be around 25-years-old when he died, was the leader of a group of 17 mountain gorillas.
This group of gorillas was described as habituated, meaning that its members were used to human contact.

Conservationists were worried that the group would be taken over by a wild silverback who would not want to come into contact with humans, which could have affected tourism.
But UWA has since confirmed that the group is now led by a black-back from within the family and is stable.

The mountain gorillas are a popular draw for visitors to the country and the UWA relies on the tourists for revenue.

Rafiki himself was very popular with people who had come to the Bwindi Impenetrable National Park.

But parks have been closed during the coronavirus pandemic and the UWA said there had been an increase in poaching. It has counted more than 300 incidents during the months of the lockdown, reports the BBC's Patience Atuhaire.

The mountain gorilla species is restricted to protected areas in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda and Uganda.

They can be found in Uganda's Bwindi Impenetrable National Park and a network of parks in the Virunga Massif range of mountains which straddle the borders of the three countries.
In 2018, the mountain gorilla was removed from the list of critically endangered species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, after intensive conservation efforts, including anti-poaching patrols, paid off.

The IUCN now classifies the species as endangered.