French government to launch legal action against bear killers

French police are hunting the killer of a brown bear in the Pyrénées after the government said it would bring legal action against the culprit.

Élisabeth Borne, the ecology minister, described the shooting of the animal, a protected species, as “illegal and deeply regrettable”. The bear was a four or five-year-old male weighing 150kg to 200kg, according to local officials in the Ariège region.

“The prefect is going there. The state will bring legal action,” Borne tweeted.

The reintroduction of bears from Slovenia into the Pyrénées, where they had been hunted almost to extinction, has been controversial since it began in the mid-1990s It is fiercely opposed by the region’s sheep farmers in France and on the Spanish side of the mountains.

When French and Spanish authorities tried to introduce 15 bears into the Pyrénées in 2006, farmers made deadly traps of pots of honey laced with broken glass.

There are an estimated 50 bears in the Pyrénées, a number that experts say will not guarantee the survival of the species. France adopted a 10-year “bear plan” in 2018 to reintroduce more of the animals, but environmentalists claim the government suspended the measure after lobbying from farmers; last year, locals said bears killed 1,173 sheep and destroyed 36 bee hives.

To encourage “coexistence” between farmers and bears, the French government offers funding for training guard dogs, installing fences to protect herds and the hiring of extra shepherds to keep an eye on flocks. Farmers say the mountain terrain means the measures are ineffective because the sheep spread out over a wide area, making them difficult to follow and vulnerable to attack. They also say the bears panic flocks into stampeding over cliffs.

Laurent Dumaine, the prosecutor for the commune of Foix, said an investigation would be opened for “unauthorised destruction of a protected species”, which carries a three-year jail term and a fine of €150,000.

Alain Reynes, the director of the Pays de l’ours (country of bears) organisation, said animal protection organisations would also take legal action against whoever killed the bear.

“Nobody has the right to kill a bear in the Pyrénées,” Reynes said. “It’s a protected species … we will do all in our power to find whoever is responsible and get them convicted.”

Environmental activists who support the bears say opposition to them is down to small farmers’ frustration at being swallowed up by agricultural multinationals.

“The bear is a pretext, unfortunately,” Florence Cortès, a Green party member, told RFI radio last year.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jun/10/french-government-to-launch-legal-action-against-bear-killers

News

May

10

Kentucky Derby races on amid 7th death and scratched favorite Forte
May

10

Trainer suspended from Kentucky Derby after two of his horses mysteriously die after races
April

30

Brazil court bans live cattle exports over animal welfare concerns
April

28

New Zealand ships last livestock as ban takes effect
April

28

Undercover investigation reveals elephant ivory being sold across Florida, and sellers who do not have papers to prove legality
April

28

Giant panda Ya Ya returns home to warm welcome
April

22

Mexico takes aim against marine animals' trafficking but criminal networks persist
April

22

Homeward bound: Lost dog returns home after surviving epic 150-mile journey across Alaskan sea ice
April

22

The worst farm fire in decades kills 18,000 cows in West Texas
April

22

Six cattle that died mysteriously in Texas had their tongues removed, authorities say