Tuesday 15 March 2022

Britain is still a country where rich old Lords can shoot and kill ‘endangered animals’ abroad and bring their trophies back to Britain

It is still legal to hunt and kill wild animals in Britain but the 'Animals Abroad Bill' which had passed through the House of Commons, was due to become 'The Animals Abroad Law' after it passed through  the House of Lords. It contained measures, including banning adverts for holidays that include elephant rides. Most importantly, it was to be a flagship bill signalling to the world that post-Brexit Britain was a 'World Leader in Animal Rights', legislating against animal cruelty abroad and banning the import of trophies of endangered animals.

Unfortunately, both for the animals and Britain's reputation, over the weekend it emerged that the Bill was no longer likely to be implemented and the trophy hunting import ban would no longer take place in this parliament. Boris Johnson's Government has officially blamed a 'Lack of Parliamentary time' to implement the Bill, elements of which were promised in the 2019 Conservative Election Manifesto. In reality Government Ministers have blamed lobbying from the traditional wing of the party for No 10’s change of heart over the bill. A senior government source said : 

“A handful of crusties have managed to seize control. A handful of very wealthy peers are pressing for all the animal welfare measures to be dropped because they fear eventually it might mean their weekends could be affected”.

Britain in 2022 is a country where a group of rich old lords who want to hunt and shoot animals abroad are allowed to bring their trophies back to Britain. Some within the Conservative Party believe that trophy-hunting animal rights activists will say that it is hypocritical to legislate based on nature-depleting action abroad, when shooting weekends are still allowed in Britain.

Sir Roger Gale, a member of the 'Conservative Animal Welfare Foundation', which counts the prime Minister’s wife, Carrie Johnson, as a patron, spoke out on Monday and said : “There is absolutely no place for trophy hunting in the civilised modern world. There is an infinitely better living for those in developing countries to be made out of photo tourism, the photographing of living wild animals, then there ever has been in murdering those animals simply to bring their body parts home and stick them on a wall. That is why trophy hunting has to be banned, and it has to be banned now”.

His position is bolstered by new polling from 'Survation', commissioned by the 'Campaign to Ban Trophy Hunting', which found that 92% of Conservative supporters are in favour of : 'A ban on imports of endangered animal hunting trophies'. Eduardo Goncalves, of the Campaign said : “Dropping a bill backed by 92% of your party’s supporters is baffling, to say the least. Aside from it being a broken manifesto commitment, it doesn’t look good when the Prime Minister and the Queen tell MPs the ban is going ahead, only to mysteriously axe it for no good reason. One can only hope this is some terrible misunderstanding and that Boris Johnson will move quickly to clarify matters. If, as is expected, there is a new Queen’s Speech in May, then it is imperative that the trophy ban is included within it. The patience of many Tory voters is fraying. Animal welfare issues can be strong drivers of voting intention. If the Conservatives go back on this commitment, they can expect it to come back to haunt them”.

Christopher Graffius, 'Executive Director of Communications and Public Affairs' at the 'British Association of Shooting and Conservation', said : “There is much good in the animals abroad bill that everyone who cares for animals and the countryside will support, but there are areas of the Bill such as banning the importation of trophies from sustainable and regulated hunting which are not evidence based and will damage conservation. With limited parliamentary time produced by a heavy legislative agenda and war in Ukraine, the withdrawal of the Bill allows for further consideration and improvement before its resubmitted to Parliament ”.


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