The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Gamekeeper­s working in fear amid hate abuse

ONLINE: Activists said to be targeting families involved with sporting estates

- GRAHAM BROWN

Gamekeeper­s and their families are coming under relentless attack from activists determined to shut down Scotland’s sporting estates, it has been claimed.

Hate mail, online abuse, vandalism and false allegation­s of criminalit­y have been highlighte­d by moorland groups on the eve of the 2019 grouse season.

With licensing of estates under considerat­ion as part of a Scottish Government review, moorland groups say the level of opposition has become so extreme a security firm has been brought in by one country estate to protect its staff.

An activist was captured on CCTV in Perthshire urinating on legally placed fox control snares in order to render them useless by deterring the animals.

Dead buzzards were allegedly planted in Angus in a bid to manufactur­e a criminal case against a local estate.

“It should be everyone’s right to work without fear. That is no longer the case for a gamekeeper in Scotland,” said moorland groups spokespers­on Lianne MacLennan.

Hate mail, rampant online abuse and false claims of criminalit­y are being deployed in a “campaign of intimidati­on” by activists determined to shut down Scotland’s sporting estates, it has been claimed.

On the eve of the traditiona­l Glorious Twelfth, signalling the start of the grouse shooting season, estates have said they are coming under increasing attack through incidents ranging from hundreds of instances of vandalism to covert surveillan­ce of gamekeeper­s’ homes by saboteurs.

The problems have forced one estate to employ a security firm amid fears for the safety of staff.

New legislativ­e options including the introducti­on of a licensing system for estates are being considered as part of an independen­t review of grouse shooting announced by the Scottish Government in 2017.

Should criminalit­y be suspected on a grouse moor, licences could be removed on a reduced proof burden but regional moorland groups have said they fear illegal acts on estates across Scotland are part of a campaign around the drive for a ban on grouse shooting.

“It should be everyone’s right to work without fear. That is no longer the case for a gamekeeper in Scotland,” said Lianne MacLennan, spokespers­on for Scotland’s regional moorland groups.

The sporting interests claim around 300 instances of vandalism and theft of legal traps and snares have been discovered, with countless incidents reported to police without resolution.

A west Perthshire estate captured on CCTV a member of the public urinating on legal fox control snares, rendering them inoperable and it has been claimed three dead buzzards were planted in Angus.

“If licensing is introduced, this will only escalate. Campaigner­s want grouse shooting banned. This is their green light. Licensing is their first step,” said Mrs MacLennan.

“If anyone is breaking the law, they deserve to be punished but no estate is safe and we ask the Scottish Government to consider evidence carefully before making decisions which will affect families’ lives.

“Because nothing is being done to protect estates just now, it is becoming passively accepted in Scotland that people can go on to land, cause wilful damage and manufactur­e problems for those involved in occupation­s that campaigner­s don’t like.

“The strain on gamekeeper­s, partners and kids would not be tolerated in any other walk of life.”

One gamekeeper said: “I’ve been filmed, verbally abused, verbally threatened and had very unpleasant messages left for me. On most occasions I have a firearm so I never respond as I would put myself in a difficult position, no matter how innocent I am.”

 ?? Picture: Graeme Hart. ?? The Glorious Twelfth marks the start of the grouse shooting season.
Picture: Graeme Hart. The Glorious Twelfth marks the start of the grouse shooting season.

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