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This is one of the lucky lions, saved from slaughter when the Bloemfontein SPCA stepped in. PIC CREDIT: Captain Ndivhuwo Mulami/Hawks and Bloemfontein SPCA

Home » Almost 7,000 Lion Bones Found at Joburg Home, Suspect Arrested

Almost 7,000 Lion Bones Found at Joburg Home, Suspect Arrested

Devastating photos have emerged in South Africa of the bones of 27 once majestic lions that have been slaughtered. The lions’ bones, discovered at a home in Johannesburg, are in demand in the Far East for use in traditional medicines and to be made into trinkets. South African police swooped on a house in Kempton […]

01-03-21 17:47
lion-bone-suspect-arrested
This is one of the lucky lions, saved from slaughter when the Bloemfontein SPCA stepped in. PIC CREDIT: Captain Ndivhuwo Mulami/Hawks and Bloemfontein SPCA

Devastating photos have emerged in South Africa of the bones of 27 once majestic lions that have been slaughtered. The lions’ bones, discovered at a home in Johannesburg, are in demand in the Far East for use in traditional medicines and to be made into trinkets.

lion bones South Africa
Lions bones from the haul of at least 27 lion skeletons found after a police raid at a home in South Africa. To use any of the text or photos, please contact Jamie Pyatt News Ltd.

South African police swooped on a house in Kempton Park on Friday, following a tip off that the nearly 7,000 bones from the magnificent predators had been specially dried, ready to be smuggled abroad.

Each dead lion, or lioness, is worth £4,500 on the black market. Their bones are usually sent abroad on cargo flights.

British Tory Peer Lord Ashcroft has long campaigned against the controversial trade and his in-depth investigations have shown over 3,000 farms in South Africa are involved in the lion bone trade.

Each year 800 lion skeletons can legally (and controversially)  be sold and shipped abroad from South Africa, but that is not enough to feed the demand for the bones which are highly prized in China and the Far East.

A spokesperson for the elite Hawks Serious and Organised Crimes Unit said that acting on a tip off they swooped on the address. Hawks spokesperson Captain Ndivhuwo Mulamu said: “We have arrested a 37-year-old man who was at the address who will appear at Krugersdorp Magistrates Court on Monday morning.

lion bones arrest
The man arrested when lions bones from a haul of at least 27 lion skeletons were found after a police raid at a home in South Africa

“A crucial part of the Hawks investigation is to discover who else is involved in this case and where these lions all came from, and how these lions all came to meet their deaths.

“The raid was at a private address in an intelligence led operation on Friday,” she said.

A source close to the investigation said: “It was very macabre indeed and we believe that at least 27 complete skeletons at least are there and the final figure may be even a little higher.

lion bones
Lions bones from the haul of at least 27 lion skeletons found after a police raid at a home in South Africa

“This is clearly not one person working alone and is part of a much bigger and organised lion bone smuggling ring and we need to find the others and where the lions came from.

“These lion bones would have a market value of about R2.5m (£125,00) but by the time they reach the Far East, which was no doubt the intended market, that figure rockets.

lion bones South Africa
Lions bones from the haul of at least 27 lion skeletons found after a police raid at a home in South Africa

“Lions are an endangered species with less than 20,000 left in the wild in Africa and with tigers whose bones are the most prized becoming so rare, the lions are now being targeted.

“This was a very good arrest and we hope it opens a lot of doors to enable us to track down the powerful players in this horrific trade, and the killing of our lions for money,” he said.

Lions in the wild can live up to 15 years and grow up to 500 lb in weight and up to 8 feet in length and 4 feet tall to the shoulder.

Lord Ashcroft funded a two-year undercover mission Operation Simba in South Africa in 2018 and 2019 to expose the barbaric trade in lion bones and in “canned hunting”.

Canned hunting” is when lions are bred in captivity to be released into small enclosures so wealthy hunters can go in and shoot it dead as a “trophy”, and the bones are then sold.

lion bones crate
A lion in a transport crate at a low-tech slaughterhouse awaiting slaughter for his bones to be sent to the Far East to be used to make Tiger Bone Wine and Tiger Bone Cakes before the Bloemfontein SPCA stepped in. PIC CREDIT: Captain Ndivhuwo Mulami/Hawks and Bloemfontein SPCA

Lord Ashcroft uncovered a wealth of evidence that captive lions are being bred just for their bones, and accused the UK Govt of being complicit for refusing to ban the import of trophy skins.

A conservationist involved in exposing the trade in lion bones, who refused to be named on grounds of personal safety, claimed that the industry is far bigger than many animal experts believe.

lion bones crate
A lion in a transport crate at a low-tech slaughterhouse awaiting slaughter for his bones to be sent to the Far East before the Bloemfontein SPCA stepped in. PIC CREDIT: Captain Ndivhuwo Mulami/Hawks and Bloemfontein SPCA

She said: “Canned hunting where rich hunters used to pay extravagant amounts to kill lions with bows and arrows or crossbow bolts or shoot them dead is no longer the industry that it was.

“It has become an embarrassment and social media is all over anyone caught doing it, so what you had was about 3,000 lion farms involved in this suddenly having a major loss of revenue.

“But suddenly there was a huge interest in lion bones from the Far East now that tigers – who were the traditional source for bones for medicines and traditional healing potions – has nearly dried up.

“Now they want the lion bones to replace the tiger bones and will pay big money for a lion skeleton and especially prized are the skulls and the teeth and the claws and the dried genitals.

“We believe there are anywhere between 5,000 and 12,000 captive lions which were being bred as tame targets for rich hunters, now being bred to feed a very lucrative market in their bones.

“These poor beasts spend most of their lives until they reach maturity in cages and when they become adults they are killed and their bones dried and shipped out to the Far East to make potions”.

The National Society for the Protection of Cruelty to Animals (NSPCA) in South Africa said: “We completed a comprehensive report into the cruelty behind the scenes of the captive lion and lion bone trade industry.

“Lions are one of the most loved and iconic animals in the world and many have been reduced to becoming intensively bred farm animals and caged for human entertainment and then for the use of their bones.

lion bones
A lion in a transport crate at a low-tech slaughterhouse awaiting slaughter for his bones to be sent to the Far East to be used to make Tiger Bone Wine and Tiger Bone Cakes before the Bloemfontein SPCA stepped in. PIC CREDIT: Captain Ndivhuwo Mulami/Hawks and Bloemfontein SPCA

“The captive lion cycle is completed with the lion bone trade when captive lions are killed in order to export their skeletons to the Asia to supplement tiger bones used to make Tiger Bone Wine and Tiger Bone Cakes”.

The NSPCA has called for urgent Government action to close down the trade.

In October 2019 three smugglers were arrested after lion bones weighing 342kg were seized at OR Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg.

They were found wrapped in aluminium foil inside 12 crates and were being sent to Malaysia as a stepping stone to its eventual target in the Far East.

With each lion skeleton weighing an average of 9kg investigators believe that the haul was made up of some 38 lions slaughtered for the lion bone trade. They are often passed off as tiger bones.

To use any of the text or photos, please contact Jamie Pyatt News Ltd.