Kendall Jones: Texan cheerleader, 19, provoking worldwide fury over hunting pictures on Facebook
Kendall Jones, who claims she is 'doing her part in conservation to make a difference', is now the subject of at least two petitions
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The smiling blonde cheerleader happily posing in the photograph looks for all the world like an ordinary Texan student, but with one crucial difference: she's posing with a recently shot dead lion.
Kendall Jones, a 19-year-old Texas Tech university student, has provoked worldwide fury after posting pictures of herself smiling next to animals she hunted, including a lion, rhinoceros, antelope, leopard, elephant, zebra and hippopotamus.
Ms Jones, who claims she is “doing [her] part in conservation to make a difference”, is now the subject of at least two petitions, one of which has 100,000 signatures and calls for her page to be removed from Facebook.
The petition on AVAAZ.org asks people to sign "for the sake of all animals, especially the animals in the African region...where hunters are going for fun just to kill an animal".
Another petition, on the website change.org calls for Kendall Jones to be denied access to African states.
The photographs have provoked a similar response to one posted by US TV presenter Melissa Bachman who sparked controversy by posting a picture of herself next to a lion she'd just "stalked and killed" in South Africa.
Kendall Jones' critics have variously described her as "sick" and "depraved" for killing the animals and boasting about it online.
However, not everyone is offended. Her Facebook page has over 17,000 "likes" and frequently draws positive comments.
Ms Jones, who made her first kill, a White Rhino, on her second trip to Africa when she was 13, has also claimed that not all of the animals featured in the pictures are actually dead. Some have been tranquilized for educational use, she claims.
Her Facebook page states that she "is looking to host a TV show in January 2015," and repeatedly claims that her actions are best for the reserves and help control population numbers.
"Hunters are the biggest conservationists there are," she told the New York Daily News, adding "we want animal populations to grow and thrive!"
She wrote on Facebook that: "Funds from a hunt like this goes partially to the government for permits but also to the farm owner as an incentive to keep and raise lions on their property."
One particular image of Jones, posing with an endangered rhinoceros, incensed animal rights activists.
Jones defended the image saying that it showed a live animal: "The vet drew blood, took DNA samples, took body and head measurements, treated a leg injury and administered antibiotics."
"I felt very lucky to be part of such a great program and procedure that helps the White Rhino population through conservation," she wrote.
Despite her protestations Jones' Facebook page is full of negative comments. "I'd love to drop kick you into a lions’ den, see how you do without your gun," one commenter writes.
Another Facebook user writes: "No matter how you look at it, seeing people smiling over the dead body of such a majestic animal is just sad."
Another is less diplomatic: "You are absolute scum. I hope a gorgeous African animal takes its own revenge on you one day for all the beautiful souls you have shot."
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