Safari of shame; how tourists shoot monkeys for fun

Shot for fun by bloodthirsty British tourists, these magnificent monkeys are the budget kill for hunters looking for a cheap trophy.

Baboons and vervet monkeys are the most popular targets, with hundreds hauled back to the UK in recent years.

They are legal to hunt under international law, and hunt organisers charge just a nominal fee to bag one – or sometimes even throw them in for free.

When compared with the tens of thousands of money cost of hunting leopards and elephants, they are a truly cheap thrill for the shameless hunters flocking to Africa to snag a sick souvenir.

Brits Chris Beadle, Alan Nicholson, David Tart and Rodney Fuller pose in these photos with dead baboons on trips with Umlilo Safaris in South Africa.

Defiant monkey hunter Micky Jordan

 

Rodney Fuller - a UK trophy hunter with a baboon he killed on an Umlilo Safaris trip

Leaving a testimony on the firm’s website, Mr Tart and wife Julie said: “Both our visits have exceeded our expectations in every aspect.”

Umlilo customer Micky Jordan from Neasden, North West London, posted images of himself with a dead monkey on Facebook.

Critics called him “disgusting” and told him: “You should feel ashamed.” However, he shrugged it off, replying: “Didn’t realise everyone was vegetarian.”

Explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes said: “It is completely inhuman to shoot creatures who are so like us. What were these people thinking when they bought a ‘monkey-hunting holiday’?

"They’re a disgrace to our country. The people who do this should be in jail. This is a crime against nature.”

Another hunting operation, Africa Hunt Lodge charges about Sh10,000 to take a vervet monkey as a trophy.

 A snap on its website shows a British woman called Jamie posing over a dead vervet monkey after a hunt in South Africa.

The website says of the monkeys: “They travel in large groups, so we will be able to find the older males from the group.

"Many of these vervet monkeys raid our orange crops... so culling out these monkeys is of great importance to us.”

A child pictured proudly holding his kill

But in recent years there has been a sharp fall in these Old World primates, which are the size of a large domestic cat and have distinctive blue genitalia.

It is thought there used to be millions of them, but now there are just 250,000.

As well as being hunted, many are illegally traded on the black market as pets.

Eduardo Goncalves, of the Campaign to Ban Trophy Hunting, said: “People will be horrified that British hunters are shooting monkeys for fun. We share over 90 per cent of our DNA with monkeys and baboons. Trophy hunters are killing our evolutionary cousins.”

Some hunt firms encourage customers to use bows and arrows – increasing the risk of inflicting agonising injuries.

Nearly 500 trophies from dead primates have been brought into Britain in recent years, including bodies, skins and skulls, according to data from the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.

They include 383 baboons and 111 monkeys since the 1980s. Such hunts came under the spotlight as delegates from 180 countries met recently in Geneva to consider proposals to protect threatened animals.

Kills like the ones organised by Umlilo and Africa Hunt Lodge are legal as long as they comply with a country’s hunting legislation.

Shockingly Africa Hunt Lodge, which operators a “no kill, no fee” policy, also arranges hunts for children.

A photo on its website taken in June shows a child named Nolan holding a rifle after a vervet monkey was shot.

Audrey Delsink, of the Humane Society International, said: ”Vervet monkeys and baboons have a complex social system and hierarchy, and these killings cause havoc in the remaining troops. It’s deeply disturbing that hunters, including children, would derive pleasure from such cruel acts.”