Two men charged after lions poisoned in Kenya

Poisoned lions from Maasai Mara game park starred in BBC show ‘Big Cat Diaries’

The dead lions found in Kenya’s Maasai Mara game park are feared to have consumed poisoned meat. Photograph:  Laurence Mackin
The dead lions found in Kenya’s Maasai Mara game park are feared to have consumed poisoned meat. Photograph: Laurence Mackin

Two Kenyan men have been charged with killing two lions and poisoning at least six others, a Kenyan wildlife official said on Tuesday, in a case involving a pride of lions which starred in the long-running BBC wildlife documentary Big Cat Diaries.

Simindei Naurobi and Kulankash Topotat pleaded not guilty to the charges but could face prison terms and big fines if found guilty. They were denied bail as investigations into the poisonings were under way.

“The dead lions are feared to have consumed poisoned meat,” said Paul Udoto, spokesman for Kenya’s Wildlife Service (KWS). “One of the dead lions was identified while the other one had been mauled by hyenas beyond recognition.”

The poisonings took place inside Kenya’s famed Maasai Mara game park, where human-wildlife conflict has raised tensions with local Maasai herdsmen. who often complain wild animals kill their cattle.

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“We worked round the clock to save them but unfortunately they succumbed to poisoning. Others are still on treatment and are in stable condition,” said Dr Campaign Limo, the head of KWS veterinary team in Maasai Mara.

In 2010, more than a dozen lions were killed through poisoning in the Maasai Mara park. Herdsmen blamed them for devouring their livestock.

Nick Murero, chairman of the Narok County Wildlife and Environment Forum, condemned the poisonings and asked locals to desist from taking law in their hands even when aggrieved.

“Wild animals are important to the local and national economy. Killing them is just like killing the goose that lays golden eggs,” he said.

– (Reuters)