Australia on Thursday rejected a plan to let big-game hunters shoot crocodiles in the country's tropical north, saying the scheme risked encouraging "cruel and inhumane" behaviour.
Under the proposal about 50 crocodile safaris a year were to be allowed in the Northern Territory, where the giant reptiles have become increasingly common since they were declared a protected species in 1971.
"My view is that there was a risk of cruel and inhumane treatment," he told reporters. "That was, in my view, inappropriate."
Backers of the plan, including the Northern Territory government, argued that around 500 saltwater crocodiles a year are culled in the area anyway, so safaris would be just another way of killing them.
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