Bloodsports target wildlife, women and children
Media Release: Auckland Animal Action
Thursday 4 May 2006
Bloodsports target wildlife, women and children
On Saturday 6 May, to coincide with the official start of the "game-bird" hunting season, Auckland Animal Action will be staging a dawn protest combined with bird rescue at a popular South Auckland hunting site.
Each year thousands
of birds including ducks, Pukekos, geese, swans, quails and
pheasants are shot during the hunting season and are left
severely injured. Some wounded birds may be retrieved by
hunters and killed via neck breaking or with close range
gunshots. However, many birds will manage to escape, dying a
slow death in the wilderness and becoming an easy target for
predation due to their deteriorated
state.
Auckland
Animal Action spokesperson Deirdre Sims says, "We are
opposed to
hunting because it is promoting violence, a
disregard for animal welfare and irresponsible gun use. As
New Zealander's, we should be very concerned that natives
such as Pukekos and the New Zealand Grey Duck, are
considered "game-birds" and can be hunted, while other
natives, such as the Grey Teal Duck, are protected species
yet are often shot and killed despite their endangered
status."
"Game-bird" hunting is an issue which is increasingly drawing the attention and scrutiny of the New Zealand public. While approximately forty thousand shooters will besiege wetland habitats around the nation at the start of the hunting season this weekend, Fish and Game New Zealand director Bryce Johnson has recently stated in the media that the future of hunting as it is known in New Zealand is not guaranteed.
Fish and Game are using their website to fervently encourage women and children to take up the bloodsport in an attempt to boost the declining numbers and public profile of hunters in this "current political climate" where blasting an innocent bird out of the sky with a shotgun is called into question.
"Fish and Game's attempts to lure women and children into this violent bloodsport simply exposes the overall feeling of the New Zealand public - which is that our wildlife should be celebrated and preserved, not wounded, maimed and killed in the name of sport," says Ms Sims.
WHEN: Saturday 6
May
START TIME: 6AM
www.aucklandanimalaction.org.nz
www.aucklandanimalaction.org.nz/forum/