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Guildford
Labour Party |
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Our views on
Hunting with Dogs
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Only
Labour is sure
to keep the hunting ban
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Tories
& Lib Dems will repeal the hunting act
We
know from the published details of the Tory-LibDem coalition that they
intend to introduce a "great repeal bill" in which the Hunting
Act and several other important measures will be removed from the statute
books.
(No
sign here of the Liberal Democrats being a moderating influence over the Tories!)
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The
urban fox - the only one safe under the Tories! |
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Tories
and hunting
The
hunter's claims
Country
Guardians?
Pest
Control
The
rural economy
Horses
and hounds
Sport
or barbarism? |
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What do the Tories
say is wrong with the Hunting Act?
- They
claim that the
Hunting Act is unclear and unenforceable.
FACT: They choose to ignore the fact that there
have been 130 successful prosecutions to date.
- They
claim that it was not introduced for policy reasons.
FACT: It was Labour Party policy. Almost ALL
Labour MPs and members were in favour of stopping unnecessary animal cruelty.
- They
claim the ban was introduced to placate Labour backbench MPs.
FACT: In the 2004 parliament, the majority
of MPs, including a few Tories, RECOGNISED THE PUBLIC REJECTION OF HUNTING.
The Act was introduced by proper democratic processes. Some Liberal Democrat
MPs came up with an alternative that claimed to restrict hunting but actually
allowed it to continue with extra rules.
- They
claimed that the ban was a breach of human rights and infringes civil liberties.
FACT: The European Court of Human Rights made
clear that the Hunting Act does NOT breach human rights. As for civil rights
- very few people would accept that torturing another living creature to
death is a civil right. Over 70% of the population opposed hunting of wild
animals before the ban in 2005 and a recent poll shows that just as many
people oppose it now.
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Why
do the Tories want restart mindless animal cruelty?
It
suggests that the Tories in the shire counties exert a very strong influence
over Tory policy and finances. We believe that these Tories are infuriated
by being told how they had to behave by the rest of he population and
by a Labour Government and they regard it as an attack on their way of
life.
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Below
are some of the claims that were made by the pro-hunting lobby
and whether any have been born out now that the ban is in place. |
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The
hunters claimed that
- they
are guardians of the countryside, they keep it nice for our enjoyment
- they
are acting as (self-appointed) pest control officers
- hunting
has a beneficial effect on the rural economy
- if
it was banned there will be thousands of job losses
- a
ban would result in thousands of horses and hounds being put down
- this
is a town versus country issue - the townies don't understand rural life
- it
is just a sport like any other sport.
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Guardians
of the countryside
In the last 50 years we have lost
- 95%
of traditional hay meadows
- 99%
of lowland heaths
- 80%
of chalk downlands
- 80%
of limestone grasslands
- 80%
of fens and mires
- 90%
of lowland ponds
- 50%
of ancient lowland woods
- 150,000
miles of hedgerows.
There are about 80 species
of birds, 60 species of plants and 40 species of animals that are classed
as endangered.
Many hunters are farmers and large landowners. They
claim that they have been protecting the countryside -
but the statistics above show otherwise. |
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Pest
control
By killing foxes, the hunters claim that they are protecting
farm animals.
In fact, the number of foxes killed annually
by the hunt is only about 8%.
DEFRA
considers
fox predation of sheep negligible. In rough hill areas 1 in 5 lambs die
shortly after birth from exposure, starvation and disease - about 3 million
lambs. There are no foxes on the Isle of Mull, but the death rate of lambs
is similar to that of mainland Scotland.
The death rate of chickens through sickness and other reasons is 9 times
higher than through fox predation.
Fox
hunting was banned for 9 months during the foot & mouth epidemic but
there was no evidence of the fox population getting out of hand and causing
problems to livestock.
The ban has NOT resulted us being overwhelmed by
foxes. |
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The
rural economy & job losses
The Burns report showed that the 300 or so fox, hare and deer hunts
contribute very little to the rural economy.
The maximum unemployment
caused by the ban was predicted to be about 3 full-time jobs per hunt.
The reality is that
there have been negligible job losses as the change to drag hunting required
the same number of workers. |
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Threat
to horses and hounds
The hunters claimed that up to one million
horses will be destroyed if there is a ban.
There are only 600,000
horses in the UK of which about 40,000 (6.7%) are used for hunting.
A ban would result
in 20,000 hounds being put down - the hunters claimed.
The average
pack consists of 60 dogs, which are normally shot at 6 years of age (1/2 their
usual life expectancy). So they do not have much regard for their dogs.
Now
there is a switch to drag hunting there is NO evidence
that more horses or hounds have been destroyed. |
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It's
only a sport
If you regard sport as a contest between equal
adversaries, then using 40-60 dogs (specially
trained to savage foxes) together with 40 - 80 horses to chase and frighten
the life out of one fox is neither fair nor humane.
Add to that the terrier men who dig out foxes that have gone to earth. A further
part of the pantomime, now officially banned, is the ceremony of 'blooding',
in which new hunters (some quite young children) at their first kill are smeared
with the fox's blood. It gives a clear picture of a ritualistic slaughter
reminiscent of feudal times, and all this run by characters dressed up in
Christmas card costumes.
It
is a barbaric amusement not a sport. |
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