2015年12月3日 星期四

Zimbabwe will not charge U.S. dentist for killing Cecil the lion

Zimbabwe will not charge U.S. dentist for killing Cecil the lion


Walter Palmer arrived at work at 07:00 local time (12:00 GMT), met by a throng of media and a few protesters.
Employees were seen escorting Mr Palmer and patients into the surgery, as photographers swarmed the office.
In recent interviews, he has claimed that the hunt was legal and that he was shocked to hear the animal was famous.
Police were present as the dentist parked his vehicle on a nearby street and walked into his office in Bloomington, Minnesota. A staff member clutched his arm as the pair pushed past a group of journalists.
One woman could be heard screaming "Extradite Palmer!"
"We need to thank Dr Palmer," shouts one protester, "we need to thank him for waking us up". For the half a dozen demonstrators here, Cecil the Lion has become a poster child.
Some say they'd never heard of trophy hunting before Cecil hit the headlines. One lady tells me she felt so strongly she is protesting for the first time in her life.
She holds aloft a handwritten board which reads "Roar for Cecil". They are polite. No shouting, screaming or jostling. A mostly quiet but determined presence.
Dr Palmer has said a few carefully chosen words to the local newspaper, perhaps in the hope he could go back to work without a fuss. But for now, he is still a wanted man.

Mr Palmer did not speak to the media on Tuesday, but did give an interview to the Minneapolis Star Tribune on Sunday.
"I need to get back to treating my patients," Mr Palmer said. "My staff and my patients support me, and they want me back. That's why I'm back."
The killing of Cecil in July prompted a global uproar, which Mr Palmer has claimed led to "some safety issues" for his family.
His clinic and his home in nearby Eden Prairie became the site of protests, and his holiday home in Florida was vandalised.
The 55-year-old is believed to have paid $50,000 (£32,000) to hunt a lion in Zimbabwe's largest game reserve, but he says he was unaware it was so famous.
"If I had known this lion had a name and was important to the country or a study obviously I wouldn't have taken it," Mr Palmer said. "Nobody in our hunting party knew before or after the name of this lion."
Cecil was well known in the Hwange National Park and was being tracked with a GPS collar as part of a research programme run by Oxford University.
The Zimbabwe's safari organisation has said the way in which Cecil was lured out of a national park was unethical and possibly illegal.
Initially, Zimbabwe sought to charge and extradite Mr Palmer, but the government's interest in him has waned in recent weeks.
The Associated Press news agency reported that government officials fear it could hamper a hunting industry that is lucrative and important for the country.

1.escorting 護送
2.clutched 抓住
3.demonstrator 示威者
4.trophy 戰利品
5. jostling 擠
6.fuss 小題大作
7.vandalised 破壞
8.safari 野生動物園
9.extradite 引渡


10.agency 機構

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/10/12/us-zimbabwe-wildlife-dentist-idUSKCN0S61G320151012


when-no

where-Zimbabwe

what -killing Cecil
who-Walter Palmer U.S. dentist
how-killing Cecil
why- the hunt was legal


2 則留言:

  1. I think he shouldn't shot any lions or other animals anyway.
    They are all have life, no matter you know the name of this lion before or after hunting it, you are not supposed to have the right to take away other's life.

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  2. His behavior is of course wrong. Whether this lion is famous or not ,he should not shoot it. Animals have their own lives ,so we need to respect them.

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