The government’s chief scientific
adviser admits the animals may be responsible for just 6% of bovine TB. There
are better solutions than yet more killing
Friday 26 August
201609.00 BSTLast modified on Friday 26 August 201612.40 BST
Tuesday was a sad day for our
wild animals. The BBC
reported that the badger cull will be extended into five new
areas, although the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra)
would not confirm that the selections had been made.
News that the already failed cull
would be expanded is particularly disappointing to those who hoped that a new
government would bring new wisdom. This tragic development is born of a
distortion of the real facts, supported by false promises and propaganda heaped
on to the farming community.
There is mounting evidence that badgers
have little to do with the spread of bovine tuberculosis. And
there are no grounds whatsoever for believing that badger killing has made the
slightest impact on the disease, but the government is seemingly pressing
ahead, cheered on by the National Farmers Union.
People close to this machinery
will tell you that it’s hard to see a clear line between the government and the
NFU; and this in itself has a bad smell. No thought whatsoever is given to the
suffering of the badgers, even though the government’s own independent expert
panel delivered a verdict that the cull was
neither humane nor effective. In fact, the shameful response
from David Cameron’s government was to ensure there was no independent panel
for the next rounds of culls.
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