Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/199842
20 Feature maltatoday, SUNDAY, 27 OCTOBER 2013 Spring hunting rig Why the public should get to vote on the future of spring hunting THE argument between conservationists and hunters in Malta over spring hunting has been going on for years. Long before Malta joined the EU, BirdLife Malta had been campaigning to raise awareness about the impact of unsustainable hunting and working to reduce this impact by lobbying for the introduction of new wildlife protection regulations. Significant achievements include the expansion of Malta's list of protected species, the establishment of Bird Sanctuaries in some key areas and the creation of Malta's first nature reserves managed specifically for wildlife. Sadly, these measures were not enough to save birds such as the Maltese Falcon, the Mediterranean Barn Owl and the Jackdaw from extinction, and Malta's list of breeding birds is not what it should be for an island of this size and wealth of habitats, plants and insect diversity, but without them the situation would be much worse than it is today. For the most part, it has been a small number of people dedicated to protecting wildlife and nature who have been the driving force behind the progress that has been made in Malta towards conserving nature and protecting wildlife. But occasionally an issue comes along that is so big, and affects so many people, that it brings the normally silent majority to life and becomes a topic of national importance. Spring hunting has become such an issue. The rights and wrongs of spring hunting are no longer just being argued by conservationists on the one hand and hunters on the other. Hunting in spring is not a marginal issue that only hunters and bird watchers care about. It is a question of national importance. The silent majority are beginning to speak. And the call is for a referendum. Right to hunt in spring? So two per cent of the Maltese population want to shoot Turtle Doves (and Quail) in the spring, why should that bother the rest of us? We might not get our kicks killing birds, but everyone has to have a hobby, right? Well, rightsyours, mine and everyone else'sare what this is all about. When you remove all the dressing and make-up, this is the fundamental argument of the Maltese hunting lobby when they talk about why they should be allowed to turn the Maltese countryside into a live shooting gallery for three weeks in the spring, at a time when the birds migrating through Malta are on their way to Europe to breed and replenish their numbers. Never mind that the two species in question – the Turtle Dove and the 'Common' Quail – are both threatened in Europe and that shooting them in spring is expressly prohibited by European wildlife directives. Never mind the impact shooting these birds in spring has on their populations or the collateral damage to protected birds shot illegally during the spring hunting season. Hunters say they need spring hunting in order to hunt Turtle Dove. Turtle Doves would otherwise breed in Malta were it not for spring hunting Considerations about the conservation of wildlife seem to be of little importance compared with hunters' freedom to exercise their inalienable right to hunt in spring. But is shooting birds for fun really a right? Like the right to food and shelter, the right to a fair wage or a fair trial? And how does the exercising of this right by more than 10,000 Maltese hunters impact on the rights of the remaining 400,000 Maltese people? The right of access to the countryside Large tracts of the countryside commonly owned by all Maltese people are made no-go areas during the hunting season because hunters claim the right to fire shotguns in public parts of the countryside used at other times of the year, when it is safe to do so, by walkers, picnickers, campers and people just out enjoying nature. This conflict of interest was highlighted by the forced cancellation of school visits to Majjistral Nature and History Park and Xrobb L-Għagin Nature Park last spring amidst fears for the safety of the children while hunters were shooting inside these public parks. And spring being the time of year when the Maltese countryside is arguably at it's most beautiful – lush and green with flowering plants, the days lengthening again after winter and full of abundant wildlife – surely if any time of the year should be keep free from the assault of flying lead and falling birds, it should be spring. Too often we hear and read about people in the countryside being threatened and abused by hunters for getting in the way of them doing what they want – legal or otherwise. Whether it is entering someone's garden against their wishes to collect the bird they have just killed, or threatening people on public land for disrupting their sport, deliberately showering unsuspecting walkers with a rain of lead pellets or peppering the windows of cars and houses. The countryside is not the private kingdom of hunters and trappers, however much they might behave like it is, and everyone has (or should have) an equal right to enjoy it in safety, free from danger of injury or threat of abuse. If the majority of these people are prevented from doing so in safety because of the proliferation of shotguns being fired in public areas, this is an infringement of their rights. Equal rights with European hunters This is something you read and hear a lot about when the topic of spring hunting comes up. The hunters' argument goes something like, "We're being treated unfairly. In other countries, hunting in spring is allowed. We just want the same rights as hunters in the rest of Europe". It's a clever ploy – no one likes the idea of Malta being picked on unfairly. What they don't say though is this: nowhere else in Europe is spring hunting for purely recreational purposes allowed. Malta is the only country in Europe that allows hunting in spring for sport. In other countries that permit shooting in spring it is either for invasive species (pest) control, for crop protection, disease control or air safety, but NOT just so recreational hunters can shoot birds for fun. Maltese hunters, like their European counterparts, have a fivemonth-long autumn-winter open hunting season in which they can legally shoot more than 40 dif- ferent species of bird. Isn't that enough? Is it really unfair to ask them to give the birds a chance to recover in spring? The right to enjoy our shared natural heritage Protected birds like Ospreys and flamingos, which are part of the common natural heritage the Maltese people share with people in more than 48 different countries in Europe and Africa, are killed so they can be stuffed and put in a display case, sold on the black market, or (even worse) just for the thrill of killing. Malta has completely lost several breeding bird species in the last 40 years as direct result of pressure from hunting and trapping. It is only continued pressure from spring hunting that prevents Turtle Doves themselves from breeding regularly in the Maltese Islands, and the persistent problem of illegal hunting forms an insurmountable barrier to the reintroduction and recovery of Malta's many extinct breeding birds. Is it right that the lives of these birds and our shared obligation (individually and as a nation) to protect them should be judged less important than the political