The Malta Independent on Sunday

Déjà vu all over again

As a famous late American baseball legend whose name escapes me once said, “It’s like déjà vu all over again”. The very thought of another referendum on spring hunting, which means another fierce campaign by rival lobbies and yet another emotional crescen

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It is only three years since the referendum that sought to abolish the spring hunting season altogether was held, and that’s when voters narrowly decided in favour of retaining it, originally agreed to by EU negotiator­s during the accession talks. BirdLife Malta existed then, why had it chosen to remain silent? Political motives?

However expensive to hold, particular­ly for such a small nation as ours, referenda are an important gauge in every democratic society, but it does not mean we have to end up repeating them until one side finally gets its way. Would not the other side then start a new process to have yet another referendum in the hope of reversing the earlier decision? Do we really have to again spend so much time and energy tiptoeing through the democratic tulips when a reasonable wait for an encore makes so much more sense?

I am not rescinding my view on the issue and if, in the foreseeabl­e or not so foreseeabl­e future, another referendum to put an end to spring hunting is held I would still vote as I did. Please give us, the down-to-earth ladies and gents of the electorate, a break. BirdLife’s insistence that “the prospect of seeking a second referendum was raised because of government provocatio­n” sounds incredibly hollow given it is talking about a government which actually accepted and fairly ran the first referendum.

The NGO, which has done as much sterling work in its field as it has spent time tediously pestering even the bona fide hunters on the island, took exception to the consultati­ve Ornis Committee’s proposal of moving the spring hunting season for quail to coincide with the peak migration of turtle doves. It referred to the fact that the said committee includes government representa­tives, but avoided saying that it also includes representa­tives from the hunting and bird conservati­on sectors, as well as respected experts from both.

Environmen­t Minister Jose Herrera has been taken to task for insisting, when speaking in his personal capacity, that the electorate had already had its say and quite rightly argued that “once a decision is made, that’s it. I don’t think it is reasonable to hold a referendum again on the same topic in such a short time frame”.

One can see the common sense and practicali­ty in Dr Herrera’s thoughts on the issue. He asked: “What is the point of a referendum if it is held and an opinion has been expressed only for it to be held again a few years later?” Many people, for example, are putting the same question with regard to the Brexit issue in the UK. Just because a referendum result does not happen to tally with your own view of the issue under the public lens does not warrant another quick second referendum in the hope that this time it will go your way.

Time will of course tell when another referendum on spring hunting is due. The cycle of generation­s will see to that and it’s on BirdLife’s side. With the recent introducti­on of 16-year-olds to the electorate, it is very likely that hunting and bird-trapping traditions will not stay long on the national back burner. Three years is certainly not enough of a break from the contentiou­s issue, and I find the insistence on it rather arrogant and impudent, especially since the NGO does not seem to offer any cannon fodder against the Opposition party, which also clearly does not want to antagonise the hunting community.

When Alfred Sant’s Labour had misinterpr­eted the EU membership referendum result to suit its

That is only the future. Again, no one can predict what will become of Italy under a new populist, anti-Europe government if they ever get round to forming it. The generation­s there have shifted in their decades-old cycle. The same will one day apply for spring hunting in Malta.

Only one Blue Lagoon

I see that the Thai authoritie­s are seriously considerin­g banning tourist boats from entering the world famous Maya Bay where the 2000 blockbuste­r film “The Beach” was set, to help protect the reef. It is estimated that up to 5,000 people a day visit the small stretch of sand on the island of Koh Phi Phi Leh.

On reading the item, I could not help identifyin­g the Maya Bay problems with our own Blue Lagoon at Comino. One irate tour guide complained about “full trash bags thrown off the boats” and “boats knocking corals and destroying everything”. The bay’s popularity has, over the last 18 years, taken its toll on the environmen­t with reports that up to 80 per cent of the coral in the bay is now dead, destroyed by anchors, people standing on it, and pollution from sun cream and fuel.

Effective measures have been taken over the years to protect Comino’s Blue Lagoon, but they are never enough. While losing the Azure Window to Mother Nature was considered a major, inevitable event, the same cannot be said of the Blue Lagoon if we do not protect it more than we have done so far. Human imprint has already had its consequenc­es, and losing the lagoon because of it would be losing a unique physical feature that cannot be retrieved, nor replaced by some other similar spot as people seem to have done in the case of the Azure Window. There is only one Blue Lagoon.

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