![]() ![]() Whether it’s local news in Spain, UK news or international stories, we are proud to be the voice for the expat communities who now call Spain home. And it’s FREE!Ĭovering the Costa del Sol, Costa Blanca, Almeria, Axarquia, Mallorca and beyond, EWN supports and inspires the individuals, neighbourhoods, and communities we serve, by delivering news with a social conscience. Known as the PEOPLE’S PAPER, Euro Weekly News is the leading English language newspaper in Spain. Thank you for taking the time to read this article, do remember to come back and check The Euro Weekly News website for all your up-to-date local and international news stories and remember, you can also follow us on Facebook and Instagram. This means they will be more prone to diseases. Elephant tusks are now getting shorter, and more elephants are tuskless thanks to persecution”. “Elephants are going into genetic decline as trophy hunters shoot the biggest animals with the largest tusks. More elephants are killed by poachers and trophy hunters than are born every year”, he continued. “It is key to the survival of the species, which is now classed as Endangered in the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List. He told .uk, “Botswana is now home to one-third of all Africa’s elephants” Under Mr Khama’s hunting ban, while numbers fell in other African countries, the elephant population of Botswana had reportedly stabilised itself, according to Eduardo Goncalves, founder of the Campaign To Ban Trophy Hunting. “How does it being dead benefit our declining tourism industry? Incompetence and poor leadership have almost wiped out the rhino population, and now this!”. An elephant that tour operators constantly tried to show tourists as an iconic attraction. ‘This was one of the largest, if not the largest, tusker in the country. Mokgweetsi Masisi, the current president, only reintroduced the policy allowing hunting when he replaced Ian Khama in 2019. In 2021, Botswana allegedly made $2.7million (€2.49m) from its elephant hunts. This argument between hunters and activists is a long-running one, and seems to have no solution. His argument comes across as valid when you consider the result of his hunting trip that day provided meat for 350 villagers, and gave work to his local trackers. He furthered his case by pointing out that it attracts tourism, which in turn creates jobs, and fuels the local economy. Hunting is a ‘sustainable conservation tool’, he argued. ![]() When you take a bull like that, there’s a lot of remorse, there’s a lot of sadness, you think about the great life that this elephant has led”.Īdding, ‘You know, there’s more to it than shooting a bull, taking a photograph, becoming a hero and all this other nonsense’. In an effort to justify his actions, Kachelhoffer engaged with Robbie Kroger, host of the ‘Blood Origins’ podcast, telling him, ‘To be in a position to hunt a bull like that, it’s an incredible privilege. He has since made his Facebook profile private. The big animal was killed with one single shot, and was reportedly over 50 years of age.Īfter posting an image of his conquest on Facebook, he himself became a target, of outraged users. ![]() Another elephant thought to weigh 90 pounds, was also killed on the same trip. Kachelhoffer is believed to have been paid $50,000 (€46,100) for his work. Its tusks are said to have been almost 8 feet in length. It is thought to be the oldest elephant to have been hunted and killed professionally since 1996. He has come under fire though for recently killing one of the oldest elephants in the country of Botswana.Īccording to reports, the elephant in question was a ‘hundred pounder’, or ‘big tusker’, so-called due to its huge size, and uniquely-long tusks. ![]() He makes a very good living from helping ‘trophy-hunter’ clients track down and hunt wild and dangerous animals in Africa. After killing one of Botswana’s oldest elephants a big-game hunter has been condemned for his actionĬontroversy is surrounding professional big-game hunter Leon Kachelhoffer. ![]()
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