The NSPCA has said they will be laying further charges on the owners of Pienika Farm
A harrowing video shows two fatally ill lion cubs locked inside a metal crate on Pienika Farm in South Africa.
The young cats were found to be suffering from neurological conditions and had to be euthanized at the scene, according to IOL.
Spurred to investigate further, inspectors from the NSPCA discovered the lifeless bodies of 20 other lions and tigers of varying ages in a freezer.
Five carcasses were removed for post-mortem examinations to determine the cause of death.
Lion cubs found dead in freezer at ‘hunting’ farm’
The discovery follows a sickening incident in April on the same farm in the North West province.
Officers from South Africa’s National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals discovered 108 neglected lions, tigers, leopards and caracals living in conditions they described as ‘horrendous’.
They were kept in small, overcrowded, filthy enclosures and deprived of water.
Some of the animals were entirely bald because of parasitic infections and two suffered from neurological conditions ‘likely to be the result of in-breeding’.
The lifeless bodies of 20 lion and tiger of varying ages were found in a freezer
‘Here in South Africa, where lions are indigenous and a massive part of our heritage, we are condemning thousands of lions to a life of captivity, where their basic needs are not being catered for, and we are subjecting what is globally known as the king of the animal kingdom to a pathetic life in a cage, waiting for death.’
Head of Policy at the Born Free Foundation, Dr Mark Jones, told Metro.co.uk: ‘Africa’s lions are facing an unprecedented crisis.
‘There are now almost three times more in captivity than there are in the wild.
‘These animals have a short and traumatic life in what is an incredibly cruel and cynical industry.’
Mr Goncalves, said: ‘The farm is in Lichtenburg in South Africa’s North West Province.
‘There are around 60 such facilities in South Africa breeding big cats for people to pet, bottle feed, and then shoot for a trophy.
‘The bones are often sold off to dodgy dealers in Asia who make fake medicines out of them. This is the reality of big cat factory farming in South Africa.
‘It’s simply obscene. The animals are kept in appalling conditions and their owners make a fortune out of their misery.’
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