About 287 elephants in Botswana are lined up for ‘dead’ after government announced Tuesday that it has offered hunting rigths.
Botswana has the world’s biggest population of the animals- it is trying to breathe life into a hunting industry stalled by the Covid-19 outbreak.
The hunting season will begin April 6, with licenses to kill leopards, zebras and buffaloes also on sale, according to the Department of Wildlife and National Parks.
The restart of hunting in Botswana last year, after a ban imposed by former President Ian Khama in 2014 was lifted, was largely thwarted by restrictions associated with the coronavirus.
With the disease still raging across large parts of the world, including southern Africa, hunting operators will face an uphill battle to maximize earnings.
Most hunters who visit the region traditionally come from the U.S., while a smaller number come from Spain, Eastern Europe and Russia.
“International clients such as those from the U.S. can come in under difficult conditions, but several European Union countries have lockdowns in place preventing travel to Botswana,” Debbie Peake, a spokeswoman for the Botswana Wildlife Producers Association, which includes hunt operators among its members, was quoted.
“The industry has put in place the strictest protocols in camps and among staff to protect clients.”Khama’s successor, Mokgweetsi Masisi, lifted the suspension, enraging conservationists who said the move would harm the $2 billion per annum photo safari industry.
The government argued that the country’s 130,000 elephants were destroying crops and occassionaly trampling villagers and their numbers needed to be kept in check.
Botswana’s neighbors including South Africa and Zimbabwe allow elephant hunting.