Scoop SOL Special Feature: UK Country Mobilization
More than 400 000 people marched in central London on Sunday to highlight rural decline in Britain and defend hunting with hounds. Scoop’s Streets of London reporter Malcolm Aitken spoke to several of the participants, and presents the interviews in full.
Image: Peter Glenser/Countryside Alliance.
UK Country Mobilization
By Malcolm Aitken
More than 407 000 protesters shouted, jeered, whistled and hunting bugled their way through central London on Sunday, angry at the Blair Government’s alleged antipathy to rural issues and, many, defending their ‘right’ to hunt with hounds. Commentators have described it as the biggest UK protest ever.
Scoop was right there among the tweed, breeches and huntsmen’s hats and pitched some hard questions to a vicar who thinks Prime Minister Tony Blair is vermin and should be put down ‘inhumanely’, a Stars and Stripes-waving north Florida couple who say fox hunting’s a right like gay rights, and Kevin, an Animal Liberation Front (ALF)-supporting San Franciscan with a Mohican, who walked alongside the march wearing a jacket with ‘hunters are wankers’ scrawled on it. And more…
Image: Peter Glenser/Countryside Alliance.
Scoop brings you six interviews (audio transcripts), which can be read separately (following the backgrounder). Our interviewees defended fox hunting for reasons including: the kill’s over with very quickly, it creates employment and it’s a right .
Backgrounder:
The Countryside Alliance (CA), which organized the Liberty and Livelihood protest, has also sent an open letter to Mr Blair outlining ten points under the heading ‘What The Countryside Needs’ and told him to govern ‘for all people.’ The Labour Government has been consulting the CA, the anti-hunting lobby and the Middle Way Group (which promotes a compromise: licensing hunting with hounds), with public hearings in the lead up to supposedly introducing fox hunting legislation. Presiding over the consultation process is Rural Affairs minister, Alun Michael.
Fox hunting was banned in Scotland from 1 August . Labour has been talking about banning fox hunting for years, but anti-hunt campaigners say Westminster has acted indecisively and/or evasively. Blair has been accused of ambivalence and fear of powerful landed interests. Friction has developed between the houses of Parliament with the Lords backing more conservative options but the Commons clearly for a ban. However, the Government has indicated it will force the bill through the Lords if necessary, which it can do. Labour committed itself to dealing with fox hunting in last year’s election manifesto and word on the political street is that Tony Blair wants to deal with it ‘decisively’ soon, but opinion varies on how.
Campaigning To Protect Hunted Animals (CPHA, an umbrella group including the RSPCA, the League Against Cruel Sports and the International Fund for Animal Welfare), claims the CA has been hijacked by its pro-hunting supporters. The CPHA says many CA members primarily want to express other grievances relating to the countryside: about post office and shop closures, inadequate public transport, low farm prices and the stranglehold farmers say supermarkets have on their incomes. (Scoop spotted a protesting man naked, except for a shopping bag tied around his genitals. His sign read: ‘supermarkets have farmers by the bollocks’).
Murmurs of dissatisfaction from CA affiliated groups that are largely uninterested in fox hunting have been pretty loud at times and a MORI poll conducted at the march (according to the CPHA): ‘revealed three-quarters (73%) do not think the CA should have hunting as its primary campaign issue’.
Yet, one of the key points in the open letter was to ensure hunting legislation is ‘based on the evidence, is just and respects the rights of local communities’. Moreover CA chairman John Jackson says hunting is the ‘touchstone’ issue.
Although many of the placards on Sunday conveyed pro-hunting sentiment, many simply expressed dismay at the plight of farmers in the UK who’ve suffered the BSE crisis and beef ban, low gate prices and the foot and mouth epidemic. Others conveyed frustration at the ‘closing down’ of rural communities with post office and hospital closures.
Among the more powerful and slightly amusing placard messages were: ‘Buck Flair’, ‘It’s about freedom’, ‘Tony is a Hoe’, ‘We will be your weapons of mass disruption’, ‘New Labour, old fascists’, ‘Fact: Hitler and Goebbels banned hunting’, ‘Come back Guy Fawkes, all is forgiven’ and ‘Blair, You are the Weakest Link, Goodbye’.
(For more about the Countryside Alliance, and the UK Government and anti hunting responses to the protests, Scoop readers can visit www.countryside-alliance.org, www.number-10.gov.uk/output/Page6132.asp and http:// http://www.league.uk.com respectively).
THE INTERVIEWS
The vicar: Rev’d Dr Peter
Mullen. - CLICK HERE
American
fox hunting representatives: Mr and Mrs C Martinwood III
- CLICK HERE
Kevin, the San
Franciscan animal liberationist with a Mohican, and 'hunters
are wankers’ scrawled on the back of his jacket. - CLICK HERE
Barbara Buglass, television
producer from Northumberland. - CLICK
HERE
John Pugh, chairman, Welsh Farmers Fox
Control Association. - CLICK
HERE
Man who didn’t want to be named, service
manager for agricultural machinery dealership in
Cambridgeshire. - CLICK HERE
The vicar: Rev’d Dr Peter Mullen. Scoop: Are
you an advocate of fox hunting? RevMullen:
Yes. Scoop: This is inconsistent isn’t it, with
biblical teachings, and the idea that God created all
creatures. Surely God wouldn’t want to see people treating
foxes so cruelly. RevMullen: No the thing about
foxes is that they are vermin; they are almost as verminous
as the government of England. They are almost as verminous
as Tony Blair-not quite. But I therefore think they ought to
be put down at every conceivable opportunity, but unlike
Tony Blair, who I think should be put down in a most
inhumane way, I think that foxes should be put down in a
humane way. And, having been a country person for 15 years
of my life and having had my hens, you know, eaten to pieces
three or four times, I mean, I realise that foxes ought to
be put down humanely. Hunting by hounds is the best way to
do that. Scoop: Doesn’t a hunt with hounds
typically culminate with the fox being torn apart by
hounds? RevMullen: No it doesn’t. This is myth.
This is the urban myth. The fox is killed by the instincts
of the hounds…snaps it neck straight away. What happens
after that doesn’t matter because the damn thing is dead and
good riddance. One wishes that one could say the same about
Mr Blair. Scoop: As big as this march is, you are
really representing a minority aren’t you? RevMullen:
No, we are representing the majority. Scoop:
The League of Cruel Sports says at least a 2-1; perhaps a
3-1 split exists favouring a ban. The majority of Britons
want to see the end of this. RevMullen: They
haven’t turned out have they? You know, they haven’t turned
out as we’ve turned out. That is the awful thing about these
people. They are really sort of left wing fascists in that,
really, they are old-fashioned puritans like Oliver
Cromwell. They want to tell people how to live their lives
you know and that is not the way that makes sense to me, the
way that we ought to do things.
American fox hunting representatives: Mr and Mrs C
Martinwood III Scoop: What on earth are
a couple of Americans doing in London supporting fox
hunting? MrsM3: I’m the chairman of the American
MFHA [Masters of Fox Hounds Association , of North
America]…my husband is a past chairman and we see this as a
civil rights issue…absolutely…and, you know, you’ve got Tony
Blair who is trying to take away the rights of a minority
and we as a minority deserve the same protection as any
other minority does and we are law-abiding, wonderful, kind,
polite people and he’s treating us like
criminals. Scoop: Is fox hunting very popular in
the United States? MrsM3: Yes, there are 175
hunts in the United States. Scoop: There’s a
widespread perception here in the UK…the League Against
Cruel MrsM3: Yeah, yeah, we’re very,
very familiar with them. Scoop: They say various
polls have shown by far the majority of Brits really are
opposed to fox hunting, what do you have to say about
that? MrsM3: Well, I’m opposed to people that
take drugs; I’m not keen on homosexuals. I mean, there are a
lot of things. But that doesn’t mean, you know, I think they
have their rights too. You know, I mean there are a lot of
things that I don’t like, but it doesn’t mean I want them
banned, although I certainly think drugs being banned is a
good thing… Scoop: So you see this as a minority
rights issue to some extent…just like gay
rights? MrsM3: Absolutely, absolutely and I see
it as much ado about nothing. Scoop: The League Against Cruel
Sports says that typically a hunt culminates in a fox being
torn apart by hounds. That sounds cruel. What do you have to
say about that? MrM3: That is unequivocally wrong.
I’ve hunted a pack of hounds for 30 years. Scoop:
Tell me what happens normally at the end of a
hunt. MrM3: What happens is if the hounds
actually catch up with the fox, he’s killed by the first
hound that grabs him, period, end of sentence. He is not
torn apart, he is not thrown to the hounds while alive. Yes,
the hounds, following on after the fox is dead will eat the
fox, that’s part of the kill. What they do naturally. Foxes
eat rats. Cats eat birds. Scoop: Do you think it’s
an effective form of culling? MrM3: In certain
areas. (microphone back to Mrs C Martinwood
III) MrsM3: It is not an animal rights issue.
It’s class warfare and even that is ridiculous, it’s looked
at as an aristocratic sport. It is not at all. It is the
most egalitarian of sports. People from all walks of life,
all ages…all sexes, anybody can do it. I hate to tell you
this but we’ve got to go.
Kevin, the San Franciscan animal liberationist with a
Mohican, and 'hunters are wankers’ scrawled on the back of
his jacket. Scoop: I can see what you’ve got
there on your back…ALF…and you’re saying ‘hunters are
wankers’…have you been in this vicinity today? Kevin:
I’ve been here since twelve o’clock. Scoop:
What have you been doing? Kevin: Yeah, [pointing
at a stretch of road and gesturing]…up and
down. Scoop: And, have you had any
hassle? Kevin: Yeah. Scoop: Anything
major? Kevin: Yeah, from the National Front [a
small far right, British anti-immigrant political party,
some of its members are known for their ‘street
politics’]. Scoop: The National Front are here are
they? So why are you so opposed to fox hunting? Kevin:
I’m into animal liberation. Scoop: The people
that I’ve spoken to today who are pro fox hunting say that
when a fox is killed it is very quick, it’s not cruel. What
have you got to say about that? Kevin: Well,
it’s torn apart while it’s alive, by loads of dogs...rip it
apart…that’s not quick. Scoop: There’s also the
argument that fox hunting is a form of culling as
well. Kevin: Well, there are better ways of
doing it than that. Personally, I don’t believe in culling
them anyway. But if you have to cull them, like, do it a
humane way. Hunting is not humane. That is a
sport. Scoop: Have you been here with other people,
or just by yourself? Kevin: I’m by
myself. Scoop: What should the government do about
fox hunting? Kevin: Ban it,
totally. Scoop: What do you think of the media
coverage in this country of the issue. You know, about fox
hunting, should it go, or should it stay? Kevin:
Well up to today, I’ve been watching the news trying to find
out about today and it was all crap. All it showed was the
fox hunting people getting ready from the countryside to
come up here. They didn’t show anything else other than
their side on the TV. I was really disappointed with that
because knowing your TV…well…TV over here is normally, like,
quite unbiased. Scoop: You’re an animal
liberationist. What are your core beliefs? Kevin:
You don’t hurt animals, you know. Scoop: How would
you describe yourself politically? Kevin: Hard
statement. I’m not a hippy; I’m not left
wing. Scoop: You’re not left wing? Kevin:
No hell no, I’m not right wing either. Scoop:
What form did this hassle from the National Front take, were
you actually attacked, or? Kevin: Well, I was
walking down here earlier and they were shouting
abuse…actually one of them got arrested up there about ten
minutes ago. The cops were hassling me about my
jacket… Scoop: What were they saying? Kevin:
They said ‘are you aware that we’ve been following you
fuckin’…excuse me…’following you all day’ and they said
ahh…there was like four cops around me…and they started
saying, like…’ahh…what’s on the back of your jacket?’,
searched me and stuff…and this National Front fucker started
shouting something and got abusive, so they arrested him…it
took four of them to take him down. So I thought ‘woohoo’
[laughs]. I Ieft really quickly.
Barbara Buglass, television producer from
Northumberland. Scoop: What organization
are you here with today? Barbara: I’m here with
the Tindall hunt, which is from Northumberland, north-east
England. Scoop: Yes, are you primarily here as a
huntswoman? Barbara: Yeah, I hunt, but I also
come from a farming background. My parents were farmers and
I’m concerned what’s happening to farmers and the British
countryside in general. Scoop: When you say you
hunt, what sort of hunting are you talking
about? Barbara: I fox hunt. I’ve fox hunted since
I was five years old: so it’s something that I’ve grown up
with. Scoop: There are a lot of people here, people
I’ve spoken with, suggesting this is really an issue of
minority rights…in terms of the countryside not having its
traditions trammelled by the rest of Britain. It would
appear, though, from my understanding that the vast majority
of people in Britain are opposed to fox hunting. What do you
have to say about that? Barbara: I think perhaps
initially the vast majority of people were opposed to fox
hunting, because basically they didn’t have the facts right
and I think more people are changing their opinion, because
they’re getting more information and…um…they just haven’t
got this narrow-minded vision that fox hunting is cruel. I
think in a way we have been our own worst enemies, because
over the years fox hunting hasn’t been very well publicized,
we haven’t been very good with giving the general public
information about what happens. But as this information is
becoming more and more available to the general public, I
think they are changing their minds. Scoop: There
was a report in the science journal Nature recently, which
suggested that during the ban on hunting, with the Foot and
Mouth ban…fox numbers didn’t rise. In your belief is fox
hunting an effective form of culling? Barbara:
Yes. Scoop: Because this study suggests otherwise
you see. Barbara: I did read about the fact that
they think fox numbers haven’t risen. I think they have,
because I have certainly in person seen an awful lot more
foxes in the last 12 months than I would normally. And, I
think it is an effective method of culling because, at least
when we catch a fox, it’s killed outright. It doesn’t go
away to a long, slow painful death. It hasn’t been poisoned;
it hasn’t been caught in a snare…it hasn’t been badly shot.
At least when we do get it, it’s killed just like
that. Scoop: Do you think the employment argument
is a good one? Barbara: Yes, I do think it’s an
argument and it does employ people and it’s not just the
people that it directly employs. It’s all the other people
that have work through fox hunting: blacksmiths, vets,
farriers, feed companies. The knock-on is
huge. Scoop: Please don’t taken offence at this,
but one of the arguments used for German concentration camps
was that they provided employment….You can’t necessarily use
employment and potential employment to defend practices and
activities. Barbara: But why shouldn’t people
have a choice of how they earn their living? People who work
in hunting, are country people, why should they have that
choice removed from them? Scoop: There seems to be
a lot of antagonism here today, towards Tony Blair in
particular…would you say that’s a fair
comment? Barbara: Yes, I would. Scoop:
And, why do so many rural Britons seem to dislike Tony Blair
so much? Barbara: Because, I think, when he said
he would ban fox hunting, it was originally, I think, on a
politics programme called Tonight. And I think at the time
he was clutching at straws, for something to say that his
Government would do. And he said ‘I’ll ban fox hunting’,
without thinking of the consequences. And I think people
think ‘we’re law abiding people and we haven’t done anything
wrong. There are so many atrocities out there in the world.
You know, they should be hunting right now for the murderers
of that little girl, Milly Dowler [The body of Milly, 13,
who went missing from her home in March, was found in a
forest in Hampshire last Wednesday]. Why pick on us, we are
law-abiding people.’ The money that he’s [Blair] wasting on
this should be going into schools, it should be going into
hospitals, our National Health System is really in a total
uproar at the moment. That’s why people feel so angry,
because we haven’t done anything wrong. Scoop: Do
you think fox hunting will be banned in the UK quite
soon? Barbara: I think there will be a mid way
ground. I think the concession…my personal opinion is, I
think the concession, unfortunately, has been Scotland. I
don’t think he will ban it in England. But I think he might
have to go with a mid way ground…i.e. they will license fox
hunting. John
Pugh, chairman, Welsh Farmers Fox Control
Association. Scoop: You support fox hunting, I
can see that. Not everyone is here today, but a lot of
them… JP: I am equally 50-50 here because of the
state of the countryside in general. I am a hill farmer in
Wales and I have gone through six winters with cattle I
don’t want. They are trying to destroy not only hunting,
fishing and shooting, but everything within the countryside.
Scoop: So do you think this is an intentional ploy
by the Labour Government to actually, what, destroy the
countryside? Surely the government doesn’t want the
countryside destroyed, it doesn’t suit anyone. JP:
They want if for themselves, but unfortunately they are
not equipped to look after it. The only people that can look
after the countryside is what are here
today. Scoop: What about the post offices, things
like that, are you talking about service provision in the
countryside? JP: Oh, stop it, it’s
everything. Scoop: These post offices are
economically not viable are they? We can’t afford [great
cheer from crowd] to have post offices out in the middle of
nowhere. JP: We deserve post offices. We deserve
good roads. We deserve a government that looks after the
countryside. The people of the city likes to come out to
view it. Conservation does not come cheap. That can only be
brought about by the people who have been there for
generations. Scoop: It’s a small minority of
Britons who live in the countryside. JP: It is not a sport. It is looking
after the countryside by controlling vermin. The most humane
way of controlling vermin is with the hounds and terriers
and the people who are here today. Scoop: Whoa…the
noise…[hunting bugle sounds]…thousands of people cheering
loudly nearby]… JP: Yes, it’s bloody lovely. Man
who didn’t want to be named, service manager for
agricultural machinery dealership in
Cambridgeshire. Scoop: So what are you here for
primarily today? Man: What am I here for today.…I
am here to support all my colleagues who have come from all
corners of the countryside, England, Scotland, Wales and
Ireland, they have all come here for one common purpose: to
be heard. We have a problem, there is a man who is at the
top of this country, whose name is Tony Blair. He’s blind to
the problems in the countryside; he just does not want to
know. He’s focused on urban matters and that sort of thing
and he just wants to try and shut down the countryside for
some reason. Scoop: Let’s get a bit more specific.
What issues are the most important for the British
countryside at the moment? Man: Livelihoods.
Particularly in farming. I am here for a farming reason. We
have customers….I work for farm machinery dealers, we repair
machinery for them. It’s very, very evident, the lack of
cash nowadays, because of cash problems in farming…and it
frightens me the number of customers, account holders we
have seen fall off their perch in the last two years, three
years. That sort of thing. I’ve brought a message to London,
saying ‘save are our rural jobs’ and that is exactly why we
are here. Scoop: You could just say that’s just
business, some people win and some people fail. Man:
Ahh….If you like. But I was born as a rural person. I
have two sons that want to come into the rural
industry…[more nearly overwhelming noise…hunting bugles
blown loudly in unison, massive cheers go up as a sign held
up by a couple of supporters shows that another total has
been exceeded on the counter at the end of march…numbers
were being relayed back to where the sign was, on a balcony
in a building on Pall Mall near Buckingham Palace] This is
good, this is good. I hope everybody can hear this. This is
why we hope to have 300 000-plus people here to just get the
message across to Tony Blair, that he has got to take notice
of us. He’s blind. We need somebody that’s opened eye to the
countryside. You as a kiwi know, I know there 3.2 million
people in New Zealand, there’s 70 million sheep, you’ve got
20-plus head of sheep per population…I just wish we had more
people listening to rural issues here. Scoop: Can
we get onto the rather contentious area of fox hunting…are
you pro-fox hunting? Man: I’m on the fence. This
march is for all aspects of rural. Some people are here to
save fox hunting. I’m not personally against it or for it.
I’m here to try and see a future in farming. Scoop:
Have you been perturbed by the closure of rural post offices
and services like that? Man: Absolutely,
yes. Scoop: What should the Government do about
this? Man: That’s a good question, but they
shouldn’t be shutting them down. Scoop: They’re
economically not viable though… Man: I’m not
really a political man. I’m a countryside boy with a very,
very passionate heart and I think it is a very, very, very
great shame to see post offices in rural areas shut down.
Yes, okay. I understand business and things aren’t viable
sometimes. But there are ways of subsidizing them from areas
that do make money and I think it’s a need, it’s not an
economic viability. It shouldn’t be viewed in those terms;
it is something that is absolutely
necessary. - Malcolm Aitken is a freelance journalist
based in London, England. He can be contacted at MTFAitken@aol.com
Image: Peter
Glenser/Countryside
Alliance.
Sports…
(microphone over to Mr C
Martinwood III)
Image: Peter
Glenser/Countryside
Alliance.
JP: Never
mind. We are damn good workers. We’ve done a good job
because the majority of the triple SSSIs [Sites of Special
Scientific Interests are protected sites of particular
conservation interest because of the wildlife they support,
or their geological features] is in the upland areas of this
country. So therefore the people who have been there for
generations have done a good job.
Scoop: Fox
hunting is the preserve of a very small minority of Brits, a
very small minority. This is the sport of a few privileged
rich people.