
American who snatched baby wombat from its mother being reviewed for Australian visa breach
Australia is reviewing an American influencer's visa after she posted video of her snatching a baby wombat from its mother.
Sam Jones, who describes herself as an 'outdoor enthusiast & hunter,' made her Instagram account private Thursday after she was widely condemned for the video.
She lifts the wombat joey by its front legs in darkness from a roadside then runs away from its mother. 'I caught a baby wombat,' she said as a man filming her laughs. She returns the wombat to the roadside after several seconds.
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said her visa was under review.
'The department is now working through the conditions on her current visa and determining whether immigration law has been breached,' Burke said in a statement received by The Associated Press on Friday.
'I can't wait for Australia to see the back of this individual, I don't expect she will return,' he added.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese added his voice to the criticism. 'To take a baby wombat from its mother, and clearly causing distress from the mother, is just an outrage,' Albanese told reporters.
'I suggest to this so-called influencer, maybe she might try some other Australian animals. Take a baby crocodile from its mother and see how you go there. Take another animal that can actually fight back rather than stealing a baby wombat from its mother,' Albanese added.
Jones, who also uses the name Samantha Strable, closed her social media channels to messages and couldn't be reached for comment Friday.
The wombat appears to be common wombat, also known as a bare-nosed wombat. It is a protected marsupial found only in Australia.
Yolandi Vermaak, founder of the animal care charity Wombat Rescue, said separating the young wombat from its mother created a risk that the mother would reject her offspring.
'My biggest concern is that we didn't actually see mom and baby getting reunited. When she put it down, it looked disoriented. It was turned away from where the mother was last seen. So we don't know if mom and baby actually found each other again,' Vermaak told Australian Broadcasting Corp.
Vermaak also called on Jones to say where the wombat was after the video showed the joey had a skin disease. 'The baby has mange and it's a matter of time before it dies of mange, so it's important for us to find where this happened and to get this baby and its mom treated as soon as possible,' Vermaak said.
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