Lusaka
(AFP) - Zambia has lifted a ban on the hunting of big cats that was imposed
over allegations of corruption in the awarding of government hunting
concessions, officials said Wednesday.
The
decision removes the last remaining restriction of a total hunting ban
introduced in January 2013 and gradually lifted since last August, after the
government said it was losing too much revenue.
"The
hunting of lions will start during the 2016 to 2017 hunting season and this
will be done very cautiously," Tourism Minister Jean Kapata told AFP,
adding that leopard hunting would resume this year.
"We
made sure there were no complaints of corruption and only people that met the
required standards were given the concessions."
She said
the government was now satisfied with population sizes, with around 4,000 lions
and 8,000 leopards in the southern African country.
But
conservationists condemned the move, and said the government's figures were
wrong.
"The
decision is not good at all and frankly we have a crisis," James Chungu,
of the the Lusengwa Conservation Trust, told AFP.
"The
Zambia Wildlife Authority and the minister are saying we have 4,000 lions but
our findings show that we have only 1,500.
"I
hope she will reverse this decision."
Government-licensed
hunting is common across the region, with tourists paying to shoot a small
number of selected animals.
The
practice is controversial but many wildlife experts accept that hunting can aid
long-term conservation.
In
neighbouring Botswana, a group of lawmakers is seeking to end a ban on elephant
hunting, saying the animals have multiplied in some areas to unmanageable
levels.

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