Tuesday 13 October 2015

ZIMBABWE: Zimbabwe Drops Case Against US Dentist Walter Palmer

Protesters lambasted Walter Palmer outside his dental clinic after he came out from hiding.Below DR.Walter Palmer, the dentist who killed Ceil the lion

Zimbabwe has abandoned its bid to press charges against the US dentist who killed Cecil the lion, saying his papers "were in order" and he did not know he was committing an offence.

The lion was shot dead with a bow and arrow in July by a US trophy hunter called Walter Palmer in a hunt that provoked worldwide outrage.

Mr Palmer paid $US55,000 ($75,000) to shoot the lion on an expedition led by professional Zimbabwean hunter Theo Bronkhorst.

The hunt provoked a storm of criticism after it emerged that Cecil was a well-known attraction among visitors to the Hwange National Park and was wearing a tracking collar as part of an Oxford University research project.

But a minister said Zimbabwe would drop its bid to have Mr Palmer brought to justice because at the time of the hunt he was carrying all the right papers.

"Palmer came to Zimbabwe because his papers were in order," environment minister Oppah Muchinguri said.

"The documents were there... the problem now remains internal.

"We are now going to review how we issue hunting quotas."

The dentist was welcome to return to Zimbabwe but "not for hunting", she said.

Mr Palmer, an experienced trophy hunter, was hounded on social media over the killing, and after demonstrations outside his dental practice in Minnesota, he went into hiding for weeks.

He later apologised for killing Cecil, a 13-year-old male renowned for his distinctive black mane.

Mr Palmer said he believed it was legal hunt and appeared to blame Mr Bronkhorst for misleading him.

The minister said Honest Ndlovu, the local landowner, did not have a hunting quota for a lion but that the rural district council covering the land did.

Mr Bronkhorst has been charged with "failing to prevent an illegal hunt" and is due back in court on Thursday when the judge is due to decide on his application to have the case against him thrown out.

He has always denied any wrongdoing, saying he had obtained all the permits required to kill an elderly lion that was outside the national park boundaries.

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