'More Questions Than Answers' After 2 Lions Poached At Animal Sanctuary

“Best friends” José and Liso had been rescued from a circus and relocated to South Africa only a year earlier.
LOADINGERROR LOADING

In a heartbreaking blow to animal conservation, poachers baited, killed and then mutilated two lions at a sanctuary in South Africa, roughly a year after the big cats were rescued from circuses.

The two elderly male lions, José and Liso, were at the Emoya Big Cat Sanctuary in Vaalwater, north of Pretoria, when poachers broke in and killed them earlier this month, Animal Defenders International announced.

“These two animals, who suffered so much, had the good life snatched away from them,” Tim Phillips, vice president of Animal Defenders International, told The Washington Post. “It’s an absolute tragedy.”

According to the Post, the lions had been poisoned. They were then skinned and their heads, paws and tails removed. It’s believed the body parts were taken for witchcraft rituals, The Telegraph in London reported.

“This is not just another poaching incident,” Minunette Heuser, who runs the sanctuary with her daughter Savvanah Heuser, said in a statement. “We are going to unite, stronger than ever, and bring to justice the perpetrators who murdered our two beloved boys, José and Liso.”

The two lions were among a group of 33 that had been rescued from circuses in Peru and Colombia. One of the rescued cats is shown being released at the Emoya Big Cat Sanctuary on May 1, 2016.
The two lions were among a group of 33 that had been rescued from circuses in Peru and Colombia. One of the rescued cats is shown being released at the Emoya Big Cat Sanctuary on May 1, 2016.
Siphiwe Sibeko / Reuters

The sanctuary said Saturday that it still has “far more questions than answers” and will be releasing little information to the public at this time.

Roughly a year earlier, the two lions, who were described as “best friends,” were rescued from a circus in Peru and flown overseas to what was intended to be their “forever home.” They were two of 33 lions that made the trip from South America.

Tragically, like many of the abused lions taken in by the sanctuary, José had been injured in the circus. The brain injury, which left him unable to easily judge distances, led the sanctuary to put him in a “special needs” habitat with Liso.

“Liso would guide him around. They always found each other,” Phillips told the Post. “It was working very well. Their condition was really, really good. Their manes were luxurious.”

ADI shared a video of the lions being released into their new home in November.

ADI, in a statement, summed up the poisoning deaths as a “cowardly killing of two innocent souls” and said they “must not be left unpunished.”

“We will do everything in our power to bring their murderers to justice. We have two priorities, (a) ensure this does not happen again and (b) catch the evil perpetrators of this crime and ensure they go to prison,” the organization stated.

South African police and anti-poaching units are investigating, ADI said.

The lions’ deaths are just the latest by poachers who broke into sanctuaries or zoos.

One of the rescued lions is seen walking around its new home in South Africa last spring.
One of the rescued lions is seen walking around its new home in South Africa last spring.
Siphiwe Sibeko / Reuters

In March, a rhino was found shot to death inside a zoo near Paris. One of its horns had been sawed off and taken.

A month earlier, a study reported that roughly 25,000 elephants had been killed by poachers inside Africa’s Minkebe National Park. That’s 81 percent of the park’s elephant population, despite it being an elephant sanctuary.

Then in January, poachers reportedly broke into another animal park in South Africa, where they killed three lions. All three were decapitated and their paws were chopped off.

According to the World Wide Fund for Nature, there are an estimated 20,000 African lions left in the world. They are classified as a vulnerable species.

Before You Go

LOADINGERROR LOADING

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot