Thursday, 16 January 2025

A STUNNER FROM PROTECT THE WILD ON VIDEO CONDEMNING THE RSPCA

 

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We need to talk about the RSPCA..

This is one of those videos I wish I didn’t have to make, but here we are. You may have noticed that in recent months, both Chris Packham and Brian May have stepped down from their roles at the RSPCA.

But why? That’s exactly what I’ll be discussing in today’s video. I’ll share an honest look at what’s going wrong within the RSPCA and why they need to do so much more for animals.

I’d love to hear your thoughts, so please share your feedback in the comments—I’m genuinely interested in what you have to say.

You can watch the video here.

Watch here
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JOIN PLANTLIFE NOW

 

Dear John

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HUNT SABOTEURS GO TO PARLIAMENT FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER

Hunt saboteurs were invited to meet with MPs in parliament for the first time in their 60 years of pro-wildlife activism

 
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Hunt saboteurs were welcomed into the House of Commons to meet with MPs on 9 January. This is the first time that the activists have attended parliament to talk with MPs in their over 60 years of sabbing hunts.

Poole MP Neil Duncan-Jordan invited hunt saboteurs to meet with a cross-party group of MPs on 9 January. As North London Hunt Saboteurs (NLHS) explained in a Facebook post on the historic moment, sabs were given the opportunity to share their first-hand experiences of witnessing illegal hunting. Activists also laid out evidence showing that "trail hunting only exists on paper, and is used to give deniability to illegal fox hunting," NLHS wrote, and made their case for toughening fox hunting laws.

The Hunt Saboteurs Association (HSA) turned 60 in 2023, having originally formed in the winter of 1963. South Devon was the first hunt to be sabbed by the group - on Boxing Day of that year. Hunting was still legal then, so the goal was to "make it impossible for people to hunt by confusing the hounds," as HSA founder John Prestige said at the time.

After the Hunting Act passed in 2004, the role of hunt saboteurs should have changed. With hunting illegal from this point on, monitoring hunts to check they were operating within the law should have been all that remained for activists to do. But saboteurs – both HSA-affliated and independent groups – routinely have to try to intervene to stop hunts killing wildlife some twenty years on from the Hunting Act coming into force. This demonstrates beyond a shadow of a doubt that the law needs an overhaul.

Delay is not an option

The Labour government claims that it gets this and will ban trail hunting, which it acknowledges is "being exploited as a smokescreen to cruelly kill foxes and hares." However, considering the government's already established tendency to say one thing and then do something else, it's important that ministers like Steve Reed feel the heat to fulfill their promises from inside and outside parliament.

The fact that hunt sabs were given the opportunity to share their experiences and knowledge with MPs makes internal parliamentary pressure more likely. As NLHS' Philip Walters notes, it also "reflects a change in attitude towards activists who, for 60 years, have put themselves between the hunt and their prey." Walters says:

"Despite committing their almost unlimited resources to deceiving the British public and subjecting those who object to abuse and violence, the lies of the hunting lobby have been unravelled by a group of dedicated volunteers and their supporters.

It’s now down to the government to end hunting for good with comprehensive and enforceable legislation. Every week they delay, innocent animals are suffering and dying."

Protect the Wild firmly agrees that the government must act swiftly to end hunting for good. Add your name to our petitioncalling on the government to take prompt action to protect wildlife.


Want to support Protect the Wild and help fund our vital work? Pick something up from our online shop! We’ve got so many lovely items to choose from such as our wonderful selection of pin badges!

FROM PROTECT THE WILD — ARE A CPN WORTH ANYTHING WHERE WARWICKSHIRE IS CONCERNED

 

Following months of pressure, Warwickshire Police has released the controversial protocol it entered into with the Warwickshire Hunt. So, what have we found out? Protect the Wild breaks it down.

Warwickshire Hunt was given a Community Protection Notice (CPN) in 2022 over anti-social behaviour during hunting, namely "unreasonable and dangerous use of the roads”. CPNs are issued to stop anti-social behaviour that "spoils the community’s quality of life." Failing to comply with a CPN is a criminal offence and can ultimately result in a fine.

The hunt appealed the CPN and reached a settlement agreement with Warwickshire Police that replaced it. This agreement – or protocol – remained hidden until recently, despite intense media scrutiny from the likes of Channel 4. Officers from Warwickshire Police spoke anonymously to the broadcaster, suggesting that the force was 'picking and choosing' what laws it upheld in making the deal. As Channel 4 reported, the force vehemently denied such accusations.

Due to the controversy, Warwickshire's police and crime commissioner (PCC), Philip Seccombe, commissioned an "independent review" into the force's handling of the situation. In itself, this was considered problematicby many, not least because the agreement was struck on Seccombe's watch. The PCC is also a member of the pro-hunt Countryside Alliance. As a result, West Midlands Hunt Saboteurs has argued that a "full and impartial public inquiry" is needed. Warwick and Leamington MP Matt Western has called for similar too.

The review was published on 8 January. Coming as little surprise to critics, it largely concluded that the police force acted appropriately. While the review found shortcomings, particularly around communication and oversight, its author, David Peet, said:

"there is no evidence to suggest undue influence from the Police and Crime Commissioner in operational matters, and I am satisfied that operational independence was maintained throughout."

Warwickshire Police published the protocol, which is now obsolete, shortly after the review was released. So, what's in it?

red fox surrounded with purple flowers
Photo by Nathan Anderson on Unsplash

Opening lines of communication

At its core, the protocol aimed to "better protect" road users, the public, and the hunt, by 'improving lines of communication' between the police force and the hunt, according to the document. To be clear, this protocol was necessary because of the hunt's dangerous behaviour on roads. So, it is the hunt that the public (and apparently the hunt itself) needed better protection from.

The protocol also highlighted that it relates to trail hunting, which it described as a simulation of traditional hunting. However, it failed to acknowledge that Warwickshire Hunt is one of the most notorious hunts when it comes to allegations of illegal activity.

In our analysis of reports published by hunt saboteur and monitor groups, newspapers, and members of the public, across the 2023/24 hunting season, Protect the Wild found that Warwickshire Hunt was among the top five hunts with the most instances of fox hunting attributed to them. The year earlier, Warwickshire Hunt took the top spot, accounting for 12% of the fox hunting incidents across the 2022/23 season. Protect the Wild publishes these analyses in yearly reports on hunting practices in England and Wales.

The protocol bears some similarities to the CPN, such as by placing conditions on the hunt to give police notice of its activities. But there are some clear differences too.

First, to "improve the quality and frequency of the communications" between the hunt and police, several lines of communication were put in place under the protocol. The hunt provided the police with notice of its hunting meetings, contact details for two "points of contact" for each hunting day, and it met remotely with the police once a month to discuss issues.

Additionally, the hunt had to provide a "central 'complaints' email address" under the agreement, which as 'far as the law permitted', the police used to relay "any credible complaints" against the hunt made by the public. In response, the hunt had to explain any steps it had taken in relation to the complaints on a monthly basis.

As the Hunt Saboteurs Association (HSA) highlighted, this means that the protocol gave Warwickshire Hunt significant access to the police force – and access to some of the complaints against it, namely ones that the force was legally permitted to relay. HSA pointedly asked:

"Who else gets this access? And what other bodies facing legal action from the police receive this special treatment?"

Changed consequences

Second, the protocol changed the consequences for the hunt in the event of a breach.

As already mentioned, a breach of a CPN is a criminal offence and can lead to a court summons, conviction, and a resulting fine. In contrast, a breach of the protocol would trigger the police first bringing the violation to the attention of an unnamed individual or entity.

This party is unknown because the police force chose to redact that part of the document. However, the HSA have assumed the party in question is the hunt itself, which makes sense when you consider what comes next.

After Warwickshire Police alerted the unnamed individual or entity to a breach, they were given 14 days to respond. If their response was unsatisfactory, the police then had the option of reporting the violation to the British Hound Sport Association (BHSA), which is the regulatory body for hunts. If the BHSA considered the breach to be "proven," it could pass the matter onto its own complaints and disciplinary arm, the Hound Sports Regulatory Authority. The HSRA has the power to fine the hunt and take its licence temporarily or indefinitely. But whether any action was taken in the event of a breach would be up to the industry body.

To sum up, if the CPN had remained in place, a breach of it would have had legal implications for the hunt, whereas the protocol outlined a process for handling breaches that contained no mention of criminal liability.

The protocol did stress that the police were able to issue a warning letter (a prerequisite of a CPN) or CPN in response to a breach of it, when the violation in question "satisfies the requirements for doing so." But this would essentially put the police back to square one, as it issued a warning letter to the hunt in May 2022, before serving the CPN to the hunt in December that year.

To cut a long story short, it's hard not to view this protocol as favourable to the hunt, particularly considering how it changed the consequences the hunt faced for breaches. 

The protocol said one of its key objectives was to "increase public confidence in the activities of the Hunt and Warwickshire Police." Given what was in the long-hidden agreement, Protect the Wild suspects public confidence has not increased as a result of this protocol, quite the opposite in fact!


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