2015年12月17日 星期四

Week4 Cecil the lion: US dentist Walter Palmer who killed Zimbabwean lion returns to work amid protests

The Minnesota dentist who killed Zimbabwean lion Cecil, sparking a global outcry from animal lovers, has returned to work at his suburban Minneapolis office amid chants from protesters of "murderer" and "leave town".
Walter Palmer, 55, did not speak to reporters as he entered his Bloomington, Minnesota, dental practice.
He shut the practice in late July amid a firestorm of protests after he was publicly identified as the hunter who killed the rare black-maned lion weeks before.
The River Bluff Dental practice reopened in mid-August without Mr Palmer, who said on Sunday in a joint interview with the Minneapolis Star Tribune and the Associated Press that he needed to resume his duties.
In the interview, Mr Palmer reiterated a statement he had made in July: that the hunt was legal and no one in the hunting party realised the targeted trophy kill was the well-known 13-year-old lion.
No charges have been filed against Mr Palmer.
Mr Palmer said in the interview he wounded the lion with a bow and arrow, tracked it and then delivered a final blow with another arrow over the course of far less than the 40 hours that has been widely reported by media.
The killing of Cecil triggered a storm of protests and threats on social media.
Vandals spray-painted "lion killer" at Mr Palmer's Florida vacation home and demonstrators built a small memorial of stuffed animals at the door of his practice and demanded he be charged and extradited.
Veronique Lamb, a 49-year-old tourist from Brussels, was among the protesters waiting for Mr Palmer on Tuesday, and said that she was there to protest the dentist returning to work "like nothing happened".
Cathy Pierce, 63, of East Bethel, Minnesota, said she would like to see Palmer lose his business.
"Maybe that would send a message that this kind of hunting is not accepted anymore," Ms Pierce said.
Zimbabwe said in July it had requested Mr Palmer's extradition as a "foreign poacher", but Mr Palmer would have to be charged in Zimbabwe before he could be extradited.
The US justice department has said it does not comment on extradition requests.
Regulated big-game hunting is permitted in Zimbabwe and a string of other African countries.
Bloomington Police were at Mr Palmer's office on Tuesday and have a security camera in the parking lot, deputy chief Mike Hartley said.
The department has not received any reports of threats to Mr Palmer's life, he said.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-09-09/dentist-walter-palmer-who-killed-zimbabwe-lion-cecil-return-work/6760184

Structure of the Lead
 WHO- Minnesota dentist
WHEN- Not mention
WHAT- killing Zimbabwean lion Cecil
WHY-Not mention
WHERE- Zimbabwean
HOW-Not mention

1.      reiterated 重申
2.      trophy
3.      delivered 交付
4.      demonstrators 示威者

5.      poacher 偷獵者

3 則留言:

  1. He is so selfish. Why he thought he had rights to kill the lion. Although he did something made it legal to kill this lion in Zimbabwean. However, to everyone, doing this thing is immoral. I hope the government of Zimbabwean will modify some imperfect of law as soon as possible.

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  2. The man who killed that lion has serious moral deviation. I think everyone in this world should pay close attention to this kind of issue ,not only the government of Zimbabwean.Environment is important to us.

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  3. 作者已經移除這則留言。

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