The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Cyprus struggles to tackle ‘industrial’ songbird poaching that kills millions of birds

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NICOSIA: Volunteers and police in Cyprus are struggling to tackle illegal songbird trapping operations that kill millions of birds a year and net huge profits for poaching gangs.

Migrating birds, snared with nets or limesticks – glue-covered wooden perches – are served secretly at restaurant­s on the island as a traditiona­l dish called ambelopoul­ia.

Volunteer Keziah Conroy of the Bonn-based Committee Against Bird Slaughter scours scrubland near the resort of Paralimni, using a mobile phone app to locate poaching hotspots.

She climbs a tree to free a blackcap, a small grey warbler, stuck to a limestick. After it flies off she removes another 23 of the traps from nearby vegetation.

“We’re saving thousands and thousands of birds this way just by removing these traps,” she says.

Trappers can catch thousands of birds a season, selling a dozen for up to US$45 (40 euros) to restaurant­s which serve the dish for nearly twice the price.

It’s a tempting prospect on an island still suffering 13 per cent unemployme­nt after a 2012 to 2013 debt crisis.

But campaign group BirdLife Cyprus calls poaching, banned under Cypriot and European Union law, an “ecological disaster”.

In a study with Britain’s Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), it said trappers killed 2.3 million birds in autumn 2016, up from 1.4 million in 2010.

Size for size, that makes Cyprus the second-most deadly bird destinatio­n in the Mediterran­ean, after Malta.

“Ambelopoul­ia” refers to the blackcap, but the dish of the same name can include several species of songbirds that are grilled, pickled or boiled.

Nets also catch dozens of inedible species as big as owls, which trappers usually throw away, says BirdLife Cyprus campaigns coordinato­r Tassos Shialis.

“The biggest problem is that illegal bird-trapping now has become a large-scale, illegal business,” he says.

“An organised trapper is making tens of thousands of euros every year, tax free.”

Of the 280 bird species regularly seen in Cyprus, some 200 are migrants, including everything from songbirds to waterfowl and raptors.

Millions use the island as a stopping-off point on their spring migration from Africa and the Middle East to Europe.

In autumn they return, fatter and accompanie­d by their offspring – a trapper’s dream.

One poaching hotspot is Cape Pyla, a once-barren group of hills on the island’s southeaste­rn coast, a popular resting place for migrating birds.

Trappers have introduced acacia trees to attract birds seeking a safe perch for the night. The cape lies within the Dhekelia Sovereign Base Area (SBA) where former colonial power Britain retains sovereignt­y, a military base and responsibi­lity for policing.

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