Big Cat Owners Conceal Animals Amidst Pakistan’s Regulatory Crackdown

Lahore: The smell hanging in the air is the first sign there’s something unusual about the farmhouse on the outskirts of one of Pakistan’s largest cities, Lahore. Once inside, the cause becomes clear: the property is home to 26 lions, tigers, and cubs – and belongs to Fayyaz. The rain, he says, has turned the ground into mud. But the animals are “happy here,” he insists. “When they see us, they come over, they eat… they’re not aggressive.” Almost instantly, one of the lions roars. “That one is aggressive, it’s his nature,” Fayyaz says.

According to BBC, among the new regulations, owners must pay a one-time registration fee of 50,000 Pakistani rupees ($176; £129) per animal, and farms are to keep a maximum of 10 big cats from no more than two species. The sites must also be open to the public for visits. Violating these new laws could result in a fine of up to 200,000 Pakistani rupees and, for the worst offenders, up to seven years in prison.

At another property on the outskirts of Lahore, five lion cubs – their coats muddied – pace around a cage. “But where are the parents?” a wildlife official asks himself. Nearby, there are several empty cages. Wildlife officials are here after receiving a tip-off that a man was holding lions and cubs without a license and was breeding them for sale illegally. By the time they arrived, the owner was missing, leaving his caretaker holding the bag. “I was only hired two weeks ago,” he complains, as he was placed in the back of a truck and taken away for questioning. The officials suspect the owner may have taken the cubs’ parents away and hidden them. The rescued cubs have now been transferred to a public zoo in Lahore and isolated for medical checks.

But in a country where big cats have been sold for decades, officials worry the raids are barely scratching the surface. They believe there are, in fact, hundreds, if not thousands, of undeclared big cats in the state of Punjab alone. “This is going to take at least six months,” Mubeen Ellahi, the director general of Wildlife and Parks, tells the BBC. He expects 30-40% of the lions in Punjab will not be voluntarily declared.

There is also another complication. Mubeen explains inbreeding has become a common practice in Pakistan, and some big cats may have to be euthanized. “They have a lot of health problems. We are still considering the policy,” he added. He pointed to another incident in December last year, when another lion escaped in Lahore, and was then shot and killed.

Back at Fayyaz’s property, he is considering what to do next. An official told the BBC they’re dissatisfied with the size of the cages, and that the farm needs to convert itself into a zoo. Fayyaz now has three months to comply. But animal rights groups believe more needs to be done for these animals. “We’ve been calling for sanctuaries, not zoos,” Altamush Saeed told the BBC. He wants more transparency of the conditions inside the zoos, and for the government to properly address the problem of privately owning big cats. “We need a systematic solution, not stopgaps.”