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For years, we have been told that a ban is "coming." We’ve seen manifestos pledged, Private Members' Bills introduced, and passionate debates in the House of Commons. Yet, as of March 2026, the UK remains a destination for the "souvenirs" of a dying industry.

At LionAid, our stance has never wavered: The UK must implement a total ban on the import of hunting trophies. While lions are our primary focus, the rot of trophy hunting extends across species. From elephants to leopards, the arguments for "sustainable use" are crumbling under the weight of scientific evidence and ethical reality.

 Furthermore,the myth that this industry "saves" lions is being systematically dismantled by the reality of the numbers on the ground.

Disappearing in Plain Sight: The Real Numbers

While many organizations still cite a "comfortable" estimate of 20,000 lions, the latest LionAid 2025 Synthesis reveals a far more desperate reality. We are not looking at a stable population; we are looking at a species in a state of fragmentation and collapse.

Our latest data indicates that there are:

No more than 13,014 wild lions remaining in Eastern and Southern Africa.
A mere 342 wild lions left in Central and Western Africa.
The lions of Central and Western Africa are not just another statistic; they are highly genetically distinct. To lose them is to lose a unique evolutionary lineage forever. When hunters target "trophies" from these already fragile populations, they aren't just taking an individual; they are accelerating a regional extinction.

The Myth of "Conservation Funding"

The most common rebuttal from the hunting lobby—and recently echoed by the US Secretary of the Interior—is that trophy hunting funds conservation. This is a fallacy that LionAid has spent years debunking.

Minimal Economic Impact: In many African nations, trophy hunting contributes as little as 0.03% to 0.5% of GDP.
Leakage and Corruption: The "trophy fees" often stay in the hands of private operators or central treasuries, rarely trickling down to the local communities who actually live alongside wildlife.
Abandonment: In Tanzania and Zambia, nearly 40–70% of hunting blocks have been abandoned by operators because the wildlife has been so depleted that it is no longer "commercially viable" to hunt.

A Sovereign Choice, Not "Neo-Colonialism"

Critics often label an import ban as "neo-colonial." This is a deflection. A ban does not dictate what an African nation does within its own borders; it dictates what we as a British public are willing to facilitate. Over 80% of the UK public opposes these imports. We have a sovereign right to ensure our ports are not used to validate the killing of endangered species for sport.

 The Status of the Bill (March 2026)

The Hunting Trophies (Import Prohibition) Bill has faced an uphill battle. While it has seen cross-party support, it has repeatedly stalled in the House of Lords or been derailed by political timing. We are now at a critical juncture. The UK Government must provide full sponsorship for this legislation rather than leaving it to the precarious fate of Private Members' Bills.

"Every lion trophy imported is a testament to a failure of modern conservation. We don't need more 'smart' regulations or 'enhancement' rules. We need a closed door." — LionAid Team

Please help us if you can by donating to our work to secure a future for our magnificent lions. Your continued donations are truly the lifeblood of our mission.   Thank you. 

Please support Our Research: LionAid relies on your donations to continue providing the data that debunks hunting lobby rhetoric.

 

 

 

 

Posted by Chris Macsween at 16:23

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