Two men guilty of poisoning lions in Queen Elizabeth National Park

Aug 31, 2022

The Buganda Road Chief Magistrate in charge of the Standards Utilities and Wildlife, Gladys Kamasanyu, convicted Vincent Tumuhiirwe and Robert Ariyo for killing two lions.

A young male lion, Panthera leo, yawns while resting in the branches of a sycamore fig tree with his sister, during the recent census in Queen Elizabeth national park. (Photo by Alex Braczkowski)

Edward Anyoli
Journalist @New Vision

The two men accused of poisoning lions in Queen Elizabeth National Park have been convicted.

The Buganda Road Chief Magistrate in charge of the Standards Utilities and Wildlife, Gladys Kamasanyu, convicted Vincent Tumuhiirwe and Robert Ariyo for killing two lions.

Kamasanyu said prosecution had proved beyond reasonable doubt that Tumuhiirwe and Ariyo illegally entered Queen Elizabeth National Park in 2021, in Kasese district, southwest of Kampala and poisoned the lions. They were found guilty of poisoning ‘climbing lions’.

Related content

Tour guides, operators mourn lions

Lion census underway in Queen Elizabeth National Park

▶️ ECO ZONE: The tree climbing lion

Climbing lions

Climbing lions are believed to climb trees as a behavioural adaptation to protect themselves from the constant irritation of insect bites while lazing on the ground under trees.

Some animal behaviourists assert that these lions have perfected the art of climbing trees as a way of escaping the sweltering heat on ground level.

According to Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA), climbing lions are only found in Ishasha, Queen Elizabeth in Uganda and in Manyara National Park, in Tanzania.

Lenient sentence

Andrew Mugume, the lawyer representing the convicts asked court for a lenient sentence saying they are remorseful and should be given chance to reform. He said the convicts are not habitual offenders.

Mugume told court that the convicts are breadwinners with many dependents and have school-going children.

He said some of the children have since dropped out of school because there is no one to pay their school fees. Kamasanyu deferred the sentence to September 1.

Prosecution said that the duo entered a wildlife protected area without permission contrary to section 71(1) of the Wildlife Act 2019 and poisoned two lions.

Prosecution further said the convicts hunted wild animals in a conservation area without permission, contrary to section 71(1) of the Uganda Wildlife Act 2019.

Any person found guilty of entering and hunting protected species under section 71(1) of the Wildlife Act of 2019 commits an offence and is liable to life imprisonment or a fine not exceeding sh200m or both.

Help us improve! We're always striving to create great content. Share your thoughts on this article and rate it below.

Comments

No Comment


More News

More News

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});