Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

African Trophy Hunting Show North Of Toronto Angers Animal Rights Activists

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2016 12:17 PM
    TORONTO — An African trophy hunting show that is expected to bring hundreds of hunters from across the globe to a venue north of Toronto this weekend has raised the ire of animal rights activists.
     
    African Events Canada, the organizer of The Africa Show, says the two-day event in Vaughan, Ont., offers Canadians an opportunity to book trips to Africa where they can hunt animals such as lions, leopards, elephants and hippopotamuses.
     
    Activist group Animal Justice says trophy hunting is a cruel and outdated practice that should be stopped in favour of environmentally friendly activities like eco-tourism.
     
    The group has launched an online petition against the event and is vowing to protest outside the venue if organizers go ahead with the show.
     
    The owner of African Events Canada says the Animal Justice threats forced a hotel — where the show was originally scheduled to take place — to cancel the booking.
     
    Birgit Johnstone says animal rights activists don't understand that trophy hunting has economical and ecological benefits for the local population in Africa.
     
    "Trophy hunting brings in more money than plain meat hunting because you have the trophy hunter who pays for his trophy, pays for accommodation, pays for his flights, pays staff tips, pays for other excursions in the country and taxidermy work and that's just him," Johnstone said.
     
    Without trophy hunting, she said, the locals would turn to poaching to earn a living.
     
    Animal Justice spokeswoman Anna Pippus called those claims "outrageous."
     
    "It's hard to know where to start. If they're serious about wanting to protect animals they should start by not killing them," she said.
     
    African Events Canada had to find a new venue for a second show set for Saskatoon on Jan. 23-24 after a similar petition by Animal Justice led to the cancellation of the event by the Saskatoon Inn, Johnston said. A third show is scheduled to take place in Calgary on Jan. 30-31.
     
    Johnstone said she'll welcome the protesters outside the venue in Vaughan this Saturday.
     
    "If there are any of them that are level-headed enough to come in and have a look and actually be open minded enough to listen to some of these people then I would invite them in," she said.
     
    "If they're going to be crazy fanatical, then I won't invite them in."
     
    Trophy hunting has come under the magnifying glass after a worldwide uproar over the death last summer of Cecil the lion, a famous animal in Zimbabwe that was killed by an American after it was lured out of a national park.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Star Decision To Scrap Website Comments Section Stirs Debate

    Toronto Star Decision To Scrap Website Comments Section Stirs Debate
    WATERLOO, Ont. — News organizations have long grumbled about the barrage of hateful rhetoric in comment sections of the day's biggest stories, but when the Toronto Star decided to kill online comments earlier this week, public feedback was swift.

    Toronto Star Decision To Scrap Website Comments Section Stirs Debate

    B.C. Court Tosses Former Gang Members' Bid To Appeal Murder Convictions

    B.C. Court Tosses Former Gang Members' Bid To Appeal Murder Convictions
    VERNON, B.C. — Three members of a former Vernon, B.C., gang have lost their bid to have murder and other convictions overturned.

    B.C. Court Tosses Former Gang Members' Bid To Appeal Murder Convictions

    B.C. Tugboat Makes Fodors List Of World's Best Cruises For 2016

    B.C. Tugboat Makes Fodors List Of World's Best Cruises For 2016
    VICTORIA — An expedition aboard a converted tugboat to B.C.'s Great Bear Rainforest is on Fodors' list of the world's best cruises for 2016.

    B.C. Tugboat Makes Fodors List Of World's Best Cruises For 2016

    Crown Wants Guy Turcotte To Serve At Least 20 Years Before Parole Eligibility

    Crown Wants Guy Turcotte To Serve At Least 20 Years Before Parole Eligibility
    SAINT-JEROME, Que. — Prosecutors want a former Quebec doctor convicted of murdering his two children to serve at least 20 years behind bars before being eligible to apply for parole.

    Crown Wants Guy Turcotte To Serve At Least 20 Years Before Parole Eligibility

    Blackberry Downplays Priv Sales As Its Third-quarter Results Beat Expectations

    Blackberry Downplays Priv Sales As Its Third-quarter Results Beat Expectations
    WATERLOO, Ont. — If BlackBerry's latest Priv smartphones are flying off shelves, the company isn't boasting about it.

    Blackberry Downplays Priv Sales As Its Third-quarter Results Beat Expectations

    Richard Suter, Edmonton Man Gets 4 Months For Failing To Provide Breath Sample In Child's Death

    Richard Suter, Edmonton Man Gets 4 Months For Failing To Provide Breath Sample In Child's Death
    Richard Suter, a 65-year-old retired businessman, had pleaded guilty to failing to provide a breath sample in a death — a relatively new criminal offence that carries a maximum life sentence.

    Richard Suter, Edmonton Man Gets 4 Months For Failing To Provide Breath Sample In Child's Death