CONSTANTIA | WYNBERG
The Whatnot
www.thewhatnotshoes.co.za
Checkers Centre Plumstead
Telephone: 021 762 3716
“ Unisex”
Handcrafted genuine leather
R 879.-TUESDAY 19 January 2021 | Tel: 021 910 6500 | Email: post@peoplespost.co.za | Website: www.peoplespost.co.za
@ThePeoplesPost
People’s Post
Lockdown’s lingering effects on tourism The continuation of adjusted level three lockdown – with no clear indication as to its end – might just be the final nail in the coffin of businesses in the tourism sector. Guest attendance at Pirates Steakhouse and Pub in Plumstead plummeted following the announcement of the adjusted level three restrictions at the end of last year. See page 4 for the full story. PHOTO: NETTALIE VILJOEN
ANIMAL RIGHTS
Kataza saga continues NETTALIE VILJOEN NETTALIE.VILJOEN@MEDIA24.COM
T
he fate of Kataza again hangs in the balance as Cape Nature considers an application for a permit to capture and translocate the male chacma baboon, also referred to as SK11, to a wildlife rehabilitation centre in Limpopo. The Cape of Good Hope SPCA (CGHSPCA) submitted the application to Cape Nature on Tuesday 12 January. This is the second time the animal welfare organisation has done so. The first application, which was submitted on Friday 23 October, was withdrawn following the City of Cape Town’s announcement on Saturday 7 November that Kataza would be returned to his native Slangkop troop “as soon as practically possible”. This turned out to be on Thursday 12 November.
At the time, the CGHSPCA went on record, saying that the return of Kataza to his home in Kommetjie was unlikely to negate his raiding behaviour. “The SPCA is of the opinion that Kataza requires rehabilitation in order to prevent further risk of raiding behaviour,” Belinda Abraham, communications, resource development and education manager at the CGHSPCA, told People’s Post (“Kataza’s move a concern, 17 November 2020) last year. The City’s decision to return the baboon to his natal troop came about 10 weeks after the baboon was first relocated from Kommetjie to Tokai. This original move caused an outcry among animal welfare groups and residents alike, and also led to an application for the review of the City’s decision to relocate Kataza to Tokai in the Western Cape High Court by animal activist Ryno Engelbrecht filed on Friday 2 October. Engelbrecht has
since withdrawn the application. Signs that things weren’t going as planned after Kataza’s “homecoming” first began to surface in the media in the first week of January when the City sent out a media statement, indicating that he had failed to integrate with his natal troop. In the statement dated Thursday 7 January, the City said: “During the past two days, he has moved from Capri to Da Gama, and has on occasion tried to cross Ou Kaapse Weg in the direction of Tokai. Should he reach Tokai on his own accord by Monday, 11 January, SK11 will be afforded the opportunity to integrate and his raiding behaviour will be monitored. In the event that SK11 does not reach Tokai by 11 January, further intervention will be required.” On Tuesday 12 January, Marian Nieuwoudt, the City’s Mayco member for spatial planning and environment, told Capetalk radio host Refilwe Moloto that Kataza had not
made the three-day deadline and that the City was sending a supporting letter to the SPCA to support its application to have him transferred to Limpopo. When People’s Post checked in with Nieuwoudt on Thursday 14 January, she said the City was monitoring and assessing Kataza’s behaviour “and to date, he is still in the Da Gama, Capri, Fish Hoek, and Noordhoek area”. Nieuwoudt said that since 12 November, there have been numerous accounts of SK11 entering occupied houses and raiding bins. “On one occasion, he aggressively pursued a person for food,” she said. In a media statement released by the CGHSPCA last week, the animal welfare organisation also shared its concern over Kataza’s escalating raiding behaviour which places “his own safety and that of the surrounding community at risk”. V To page 2.
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