Influencer Cruelly 'Snatches' Baby Wombat Away From Its Mother Leaving the Internet Outraged
The video has since been deleted from the internet, but a clip of the interaction has been shared by ABC News.
The footage is pretty disturbing. It shows Jones leaving her car by the side of the road so she could track the wombat down. She ran to the animal, picked it up, and then trotted back to the vehicle — dangling the creature between her fingers as she ran."I caught a baby wombat," Jones said in a copy of the clip that was shared by the news outlet. "OK, mom is right there and she is pissed. Let's let him go."
It wasn't just the animal's mother that was upset. The baby wombat was screeching, trying in vain to escape the woman's grasp. The video cuts off before Jones returns the animal, if she does that is. It's certainly upsetting to see someone carelessly pull a baby animal away from its mother.
The clip sparked a huge outrage from commenters, who demanded that Jones be deported for her cruelty. BBC News reports that a petition to get Jones deported has been circulating around online even after the clip was taken down. It reportedly has over 10,500 signatures on it.
Australian Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke spoke with the news outlet and agreed that if Jones was going to disrespect the natural wildlife of Australia — she needed to go.
"Given the level of scrutiny that will happen if she ever applies for a visa again, I'll be surprised if she even bothers," Burke explained in a statement.
It's not just people's sense of injustice that was triggered by the incident. If the case is pursued, Jones could face serious legal repercussions too. Wombats are a legally protected species in Australia. That means that the law prevents people from disturbing the native species, including harming animals or taking wildlife.
"It's just unacceptable, and we're glad she's being called to account,' said Suzanne Milthorpe, Head of Campaigns at World Animal Protection Australia. 'Snatching a screaming baby wombat from their mother is not just appalling, it's very possibly illegal under state or national laws," she added, before reminding people that wombats are 'not a photo prop or plaything.'
Other videos from Jones' social media show the woman holding an echidna and 'little shark.'
While it might seem harmless, an animal in distress can really suffer at the hands of a human — they could even die from the stress. Which is why Australia's Foreign Minister Penny Wong argued that what Jones did was 100 percent wrong.
"I think everyone who would have seen that would have thought, leave the baby wombat alone,' the news outlet reports she said. 'Leave it with its mum.'
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