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Press Release 20th May 2010 |
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Wildlife charity urges MPs not to repeal the ban on foxhunting
Wildlife Aid, the Leatherhead-based charity that promotes respect for nature, is urging MPs on both sides of the House of Commons to vote against any attempt to reintroduce foxhunting.
The Liberal-Conservative Coalition Government is proposing to give MPs the chance to vote on whether or not the ban should be kept. Wildlife Aid founder Simon Cowell MBE said: "I was very disappointed to hear that the new Government is planning to reopen this issue. The Hunting Act 2004 may not be perfect but at least it reduces the scale of animal cruelty and protects at least one species. To repeal this law, as some members of the Coalition Government seem to want, would in my view be a retrograde step.
"I cannot see why, with so many pressing economic and financial issues to deal with, some politicians want to waste Parliamentary time on an unnecessary debate about foxhunting. We had this debate in the early years of the previous government, and Parliament ended up passing a law against foxhunting. That was the right thing to do, and should have been the end of the matter. It would be appalling if, while Britain rightly condemns such bloodsports as bull-fighting, cock-fighting and bear-baiting, and when dog-fighting and hare-coursing are rightly prohibited here in the UK, our MPs vote to turn back the clock by reintroducing foxhunting to our countryside."
Simon added that it was especially disappointing to see the Liberal-Conservative Government trying to bring back hunting when so many of the Coalition's other environmental policies are "so good and are to be warmly welcomed by all who care about nature and the environment."
In particular, there is a commitment in the Coalition Agreement made by David Cameron and Nick Clegg to introduce measures to protect wildlife, and to promote green spaces and wildlife corridors in order to halt the loss of habitats and restore biodiversity, Simon explained. "This is an excellent policy and Wildlife Aid strongly endorses this aim. We will do what we can to support the new Government on this. Too much natural habitat has been lost in recent years and if we can halt the decline of our native wildlife species and provide better protection for them in future that will be one of the Liberal-Conservative Government's greatest achievements. But the reputation of the Coalition will be forever tarnished if at the same time as doing this they also bring back foxhunting."
Wildlife Aid was established 30 years ago to care for sick, injured and orphaned wild animals, and to release them back into the wild once they have been treated and rehabilitated. It became a registered charity in 1987. In three decades the staff and volunteers at Wildlife Aid have saved the lives of more than 150,000 wild animals. The charity's work features in the long-running international TV documentary series Wildlife SOS.
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