homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Poacher in South Africa gets trampled by elephant, eaten by lions

A search party could only retrieve his skull and a pair of pants.

Mihai Andrei
April 9, 2019 @ 6:09 pm

share Share

In what seems like a karmic twist of fate, a suspected poacher in Kruger National Park has been trampled by an elephant and then devoured by a lion pride.

Lion in Kruger National Park. Image credits: Marloth Dee.

The man’s accomplices have reportedly informed the man’s family. An investigation is ongoing but, so far, everything seems to suggest that it was a poaching party. The four other members of the party have been detained by South African police and are being questioned.

Glenn Phillips, the managing executive of Kruger National Park, extended his condolences to the man’s family.

“Entering Kruger National Park illegally and on foot is not wise, it holds many dangers and this incident is evidence of that,” he warned. “It is very sad to see the daughters of the deceased mourning the loss of their father, and worse still, only being able to recover very little of his remains.”
Kruger National Park is one of Africa’s largest game reserves, hosting (among many others) hundreds of lions, leopards, rhinos, and elephants. Like all such parks, it’s struggling to keep poaching at bay, despite employing an impressive anti-poaching force which includes aircraft, dogs, special rangers and an environmental crime investigation unit.

Kruger National Park is struggling with poaching. Image credits: Jetiveri.

Out of the 680 poaching and trafficking arrests in South Africa in 2016, 417 were in and around Kruger. People are most interested in ivory, which can fetch massive prices on the black market, especially in Asian markets. Corruption is also widespread: in September, six men — including two syndicate leaders two police officers and a former police officer — had been arrested for trafficking in rhino horns.
Rhinos have been brought to the brink of extinction by poaching, and just a few days ago, Hong Kong airport authorities seized the biggest haul of rhino horn in years, valued at $2.1m (£1.6m). In the US, the Trump administration eliminated legislation that banned bringing ivory into the country, a move which has widely been regarded as a boon to the poaching black market.

share Share

A London Dentist Just Cracked a Geometric Code in Leonardo’s Vitruvian Man

A hidden triangle in the vitruvian man could finally explain one of da Vinci's greatest works.

The Story Behind This Female Pharaoh's Broken Statues Is Way Weirder Than We Thought

New study reveals the ancient Egyptian's odd way of retiring a pharaoh.

China Resurrected an Abandoned Soviet 'Sea Monster' That's Part Airplane, Part Hovercraft

The Soviet Union's wildest aircraft just got a second life in China.

A Rocket Carried Cannabis Seeds and 166 Human Remains into Space But Their Capsule Never Made It Back

The spacecraft crashed into the Pacific Ocean after a parachute failure, ending a bold experiment in space biology and memorial spaceflight.

Ancient ‘Zombie’ Fungus Trapped in Amber Shows Mind Control Began in the Age of the Dinosaurs

The zombie fungus from the age of the dinosaurs.

Your browser lets websites track you even without cookies

Most users don't even know this type of surveillance exists.

What's Seasonal Body Image Dissatisfaction and How Not to Fall into Its Trap

This season doesn’t have to be about comparison or self-criticism.

Why a 20-Minute Nap Could Be Key to Unlocking 'Eureka!' Moments Like Salvador Dalí

A 20-minute nap can boost your chances of a creative breakthrough, according to new research.

The world's oldest boomerang is even older than we thought, but it's not Australian

The story of the boomerang goes back in time even more.

Swarms of tiny robots could go up your nose, melt the mucus and clean your sinuses

The "search-and-destroy” microrobot system can chemically shred the resident bacterial biofilm.