Ugandan hunter bags eleven years in jail for killing a mountain gorilla

A man who pleaded guilty to killing a beloved mountain gorilla in a popular Ugandan national park has been sentenced to 11 years in prison.

The sentence is considerably less than the maximum penalty of life imprisonment for the crime.

The male gorilla named Rafiki had been reported missing on June 1, and authorities with the Bwindi Impenetrable National Park announced the next day they had found the animal’s body.

A gorilla advocacy group said an autopsy revealed that Rafiki appeared to have been killed by a spear.

An arrest was made on June 4, and authorities said the man was in possession of several hunting items, including a spear and snares.

He told investigators he had killed the gorilla in self-defence.

Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka, a veterinarian who heads the Conservation Through Public Health group, said there were no signs Rafiki tried to attack the man.

She said it was more likely the man came across the gorilla while out hunting for smaller game.

“He may have got scared, because he has never been that close to a gorilla,” she said.

Bashir Hangi, a spokesman for the Uganda Wildlife Authority, said he hoped the sentence would be a deterrent to others.

“This should serve as an example to others, to know that the law is biting,” Mr Hangi said.

About 1,000 mountain gorillas live in protected areas in Congo, Uganda and Rwanda, serving as a critical source of tourism revenue for those countries.

A gorilla trekking permit costs up to $US600 ($837) in Uganda, and thousands of tourists pay it each year.

A similar permit costs upward of $1,395 in Rwanda.

Those funds are essential to protecting the animals because authorities can use some of them to invest in anti-poaching activities and help local communities.

But tourist numbers have plateaued amid the coronavirus pandemic, raising concerns about how to protect vulnerable animals such as the endangered mountain gorillas.

ABC/AP

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