'Trophy'
film tackles African hunting and conservation
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[March 16, 2017]
By Jon Herskovitz
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) -
The new documentary "Trophy" opens in a sprawling corner
of South Africa run by John Hume, who is praised by some
as protecting the continent's rhinos from extinction and
vilified by others for trying to turn the animals into
cash spinners.
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"Trophy," shown this week at the South by Southwest film
festival in Austin, examines how efforts to commercialize wild
animals and encourage big-game hunting in Africa can generate
funds for conservation, while also arousing criticism.
"We want the viewer to go through a roller coaster of being
challenged and being confused," filmmaker Shaul Schwarz said in
an interview, adding there were no easy answers for protecting
Africa's big game.
"Trophy" looks at people like Hume, the world's largest private
rhino breeder, who has spent large sums to protect the animals
from poachers seeking to kill them for their horns.
Hume trims the tips of the horns from his 1,500 rhinos every two
years, building a stockpile worth tens of millions of dollars
that he wants to sell. He is lobbying to make the trade legal
and use proceeds to protect more rhinos.
Some conservationists criticize him for wanting to turn a wild
animal into a commodity, similar to the treatment of livestock.
Rhino horns, which can grow back, sell for prices higher than
gold in parts of Asia where there is a belief, unfounded by
science, that they can cure cancer.
Due to Asian demand, rhino poaching in South Africa surged to a
record 1,215 animals in 2014. South Africa has some 20,000
rhinos, or about 80 percent of the world's rhino population.
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The film also asks questions about the role of game resorts
sustained by hunting that can restore African ecosystems. Tourists
on photo safaris may spend a few hundred dollars a night to stay at
an African game lodge while a hunter can be paying several thousand
dollars a night to kill game.
Data is scarce on how much money hunting generates across Africa.
But in South Africa, the Environment Ministry has said the hunting
industry is worth about 6.2 billion rand ($485 million) a year.
A license to hunt a lion in southern Africa can go for about
$50,000. International agencies regulate some of the hunts and
direct that proceeds be used to support conservation efforts in
impoverished parts of the continent.
During filming, hunting became a global issue after an American
trophy hunter in 2015 killed a lion named "Cecil," provoking an
international outcry.
After that, Schwarz and fellow filmmaker Christina Clusiau lost
access to some sources who feared backlash.
"It is hard to wrap your head around the idea that to conserve
something, sometimes we may have to kill," Clusiau said.
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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