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Badger cull to be extended into Dorset, government announces | Badger cull to be extended into Dorset, government announces |
(about 1 hour later) | |
The badger cull is to be extended into Dorset following pilots in Gloucestershire and Somerset, the government has announced. | |
Ministers and the National Farmers' Union (NFU) say culling badgers will curb tuberculosis (TB) in cattle, but protesters say it has little effect. | Ministers and the National Farmers' Union (NFU) say culling badgers will curb tuberculosis (TB) in cattle, but protesters say it has little effect. |
Licences have been granted to allow six weeks of continuous culling in the three counties until 31 January. | |
A number of protesters have been arrested during previous culls. | |
Analysis of the 2013 pilot culls, commissioned by Defra and by an independent panel of experts, found shooting badgers was not effective. | |
Official figures showed it cost more than £3,300 for each badger that was killed during the cull in 2014. | Official figures showed it cost more than £3,300 for each badger that was killed during the cull in 2014. |
Other plans announced by the government include a consultation on compulsory testing for cattle entering low-risk areas, such as the north and east of England, to reduce the risk of new TB cases. | |
Views will also be sought on controlling TB in non-bovine animals such as pigs, goats and deer. | |
Earlier this week, rock guitarist and anti-cull protester Brian May threatened legal action if the culls went ahead. | Earlier this week, rock guitarist and anti-cull protester Brian May threatened legal action if the culls went ahead. |
He said his Save Me Trust would challenge the lawfulness of the culls, which are likely to restart in the autumn. | He said his Save Me Trust would challenge the lawfulness of the culls, which are likely to restart in the autumn. |
The legal action would be against Natural England, which issues the cull licences. | The legal action would be against Natural England, which issues the cull licences. |
Wildlife TV broadcasters Chris Packham and Steve Backshall have also voiced opposition to the cull. | |
Defending the move, farming minister George Eustice, said: "England has the highest incidence of TB in Europe and that is why we [are] taking strong action to deliver our 25-year strategy to eradicate the disease and protect the future of our dairy and beef industries. | |
"This includes strengthening cattle testing and movement controls, vaccinating badgers in the buffer zone around high-risk areas and culling badgers where the disease is rife." | |
The move to extend the cull to Dorset has been condemned by the Dorset Wildlife Trust. | |
Chief executive, Simon Cripps, said: "We are extremely disappointed because science has shown that culling is unlikely to work and will probably make matters worse. | |
"Scientific tests have shown that diseased and non-diseased badgers will move into areas that badgers have been removed from. So what you get is a stirring of the population and a potential increase in the disease. | |
"The best way to sort this out is bio-security, to manage your farm so that you keep badgers away from the cattle you feed. Some of the worst outbreaks are where bio-security isn't very good, that accounts for up to 60% of the problem." | |
A vaccination program has already started in a "buffer zone" around the cull areas but the government believes this alone is not enough and stronger measures are also needed. | |
Andy Foot, a beef and arable farmer at Bookham Farm, Buckland Newton, Dorset, said: "It is to be congratulated that we at last got it rolled out to at least another county. | |
"We have to get on top of this devastating disease that is killing so many cattle. | |
"Yes do vaccination but in the correct area, where there is no disease. Vaccination will not work in an already infected animal." | |
The NFU has also welcomed the move but said it was "much slower progress than we wanted to see" and called for culling in more areas. |