Local newsNews

WATCH: Emdoneni puts cheetah interaction on hold

Two cheetah incidents at Emdoneni Lodge have reignited critics' call to ban wildlife interaction in South Africa

LESS than a week after the cheetah incident involving a New Zealand teenager at Emdoneni Lodge near Hluhluwe, video footage of a prior incident involving an exchange student has emerged.

According to Peggy Lio, who contacted Traveller 24 about her experience, the incident occurred the day before that of teen Isaac Driver.

‘Our group of about five people, along with another group of 10 people, went into the enclosure and were told we were allowed to pet two cheetahs, as well as take pictures.

‘We were all standing together as a group. Suddenly one of the cheetahs approached me, jumped on me and pulled me down to the ground, attempting to bite me,’ said Lio.

The incident was caught on camera and the video footage has since gone viral.

Although both Lio and Driver were only scratched and not bitten or seriously injured, the two incidents have got wildlife ‘petting’ critics campaigning for a banning of the practice.

Emdoneni has since taken the decision  to cease cheetah interaction, or ‘petting’, until further notice.

‘Although tours are still going on as normal, no interaction with the cheetah will be allowed until further notice. This is also in line with the trend of moving away from petting of large predators,’ said Emdoneni owner Cecillie Nel on Friday.

‘Guests will still have the privilege to view cheetah up  close within the enclosures and have great photographic opportunities. ‘The rest of the tour with serval, caracal and African wild cats will be as normal.’

The establishment  has also taken the decision to not allow guests younger than 16 inside the cheetah camps.

‘Our clients believe in what we stand for and understand that this project is based on education and releasing, hence the reason for the low number of animals in captivity at Emdoneni.’

Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife is still investigating the incident. In contrast, the three-year-old child of a farm worker on John Varty’s Free State farm, Tiger Canyons, was last weekend mauled to death by one of Varty’s captive cheetah. This incident has attracted little media attention.

 

HAVE YOUR SAY

Like our Facebook page and follow us on Twitter.

For news straight to your phone invite us:

WhatsApp – 072 069 4169

Instagram – zululand_observer

At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Support local journalism

Add Zululand Observer as a Preferred Source on Google and follow us on Google News to see more of our trusted reporting in Google News and Top Stories.

Check Also
Close
 
Back to top button
X

 .

CLICK HERE TO ENTER