Sunday, November 11, 2007

TOURIST 'TO EXPOSE' GAE PARK AFTER ATTACK

This should have been Friday's post!

Ok people, listen up - especially all you tourists out there! This is Africa! In Africa we have dangerous animals - very dangerous animals. Irrespective of whether they have grown up, been reared, hand fed etc, etc, etc - they are still wild, dangerous animals! Doesn't matter if their trainers hand feed them, this doesn't mean that you can. If the trainer puts his head into their open mouths - doesn't mean that you can!

When you go out with the trainers, game farm staff etc, you do exactly what they tell you to, nothing more, nothing less. You don't fall behind the others, get off the track etc.

Never ever, and I mean never, ever - assume because a lion (leopard, elephant or any other of the big five and or any wild animal for that matter) is lying there in the shade with a bored, sleepy expression on their faces that they will not rip you apart in seconds - any of the wild animals!

This is Africa for heaven's sake - it's not a place for sissies!

Tourist 'to expose' game park after attack
Kashiefa Ajam
March 31 2007 at 12:23PM


Johannesburg might be an urban jungle, but it still has nothing on the real one - and Nazli Peer has the scars to prove it. Peer was attacked by a one-year-old male lion during a guided bush walk at the Kwantu Private Game Reserve in the Eastern Cape recently. Kwantu refuses to take responsibility for the incident, saying Peer had ignored instructions by the trainer during the walk and now Peer, a freelance journalist safely home in Johannesburg, wants to "expose" the reserve to protect other tourists from harm. "My husband and I were enjoying a few days off at an idyllic Eastern Cape private game reserve. Our days were a mix of guided walks into the predator-free, rolling plains surrounded by teeming wildlife.


"I joined my husband for a guided walk into the bush with the eleven-month-old resident lion cubs raised in captivity at the on-site predator centre. We signed our indemnities looking forward to a unique experience." Peer and her husband Yusuf joined the animal trainer, a guide and four volunteers from Europe and the US on the walk the next morning. She said the guides were treating the two male lions to bits of meat on the way. Peer said she was immediately suspicious of the bigger lion: "It was impressively agile, scaling a tree and jumping for the meat. "I thought that it was like a circus. I was expecting something more natural."When Peer tied her jacket to her waist she was rammed from behind, as the lion pawed at it. "I half-fell to my knees, dropping the jacket instinctively. "I had just about regained my footing when it approached again from the front, jumping toward my shoulder, clawing me down." She said a moment later the lion attacked again and the lion trainer had beaten the animal off her. Peer claimed neither the guide nor the trainer was prepared for such an incident. They had no radios or weapons except the sticks they handed out to everyone who went on the walk. "As we walked back to the camp the lion began stalking me again. I was bleeding. He circled the group that surrounded me, hiding in the grass looking for an opening."She begged the trainer and volunteers to protect her.When the group returned to camp, there was no on-site medical help, nor anyone trained in first aid. The owner of Kwantu, she said, also seemed uninterested in her ordeal. "I'm exposing the issue to save any other local or international tourist from this kind of horror," said Peer.
In response to a letter sent to Kwantu by Peer's lawyer, Cape Town attorney Max Ebrahim, this week, the game reserve said Peer had failed to heed clear instructions given to her during the walk. This, they said, was in contravention of the terms and conditions which she agreed to.

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