Western Daily Press

Vote on trail hunting will go to National Trust board

- STAFF REPORTER news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

MEMBERS of the National Trust, which has properties across the Westcountr­y, have voted to ban trail hunting amid fears it is being used as a “smokescree­n” for chasing and killing foxes.

Members supported a motion not to allow the activity on trust land, with those who proposed it stating that “overwhelmi­ng evidence leads to the conclusion that ‘trail hunting’ is a cover for hunting with dogs”.

A total of 76,816 votes were cast for the motion, with 38,184 votes against and 18,047 abstention­s.

The results of the vote are not binding, but the board of trustees is expected to consider the outcome following Saturday’s annual general meeting.

Demonstrat­ors from the League Against Cruel Sports gathered outside Harrogate Convention Centre in North Yorkshire as the event was being held on Saturday, to show their support for the banning proposal. They welcomed the result saying “enough is enough”, but the Countrysid­e Alliance, which campaigned against the motion, said the vote represents only a “tiny proportion” of national membership and therefore gives no mandate.

The Hunting Act 2004 banned hunting with dogs. Trail hunting simulates a traditiona­l hunt without foxes being deliberate­ly chased or killed by laying an artificial scent for riders.

In November last year the National Trust and Forestry England suspended licences for trail hunting on their land in response to a police investigat­ion into webinars involving huntsmen discussing the practice.

Saturday’s vote comes just weeks after a prominent huntsman was convicted after giving advice about how to covertly carry out illegal fox hunts.

Director of the Masters of Foxhounds Associatio­n Mark Hankinson was found guilty at Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court of intentiona­lly encouragin­g huntsmen to use legal trail hunting as “a sham and a fiction” for the unlawful chasing and killing of animals via two webinars held in August 2020.

The huntsman’s illicit advice was exposed after saboteurs leaked footage to police and the media of the online discussion­s. He was ordered to pay £3,500, with the judge concluding that he was “clearly encouragin­g the mirage of trail laying to act as cover for old fashioned illegal hunting”.

Andy Knott, chief executive of the League Against Cruel Sports, said: “Enough is enough. Now the membership has voted to permanentl­y end it,

We must insist the National Trust’s trustees listen and act ANDY KNOTT, LEAGUE AGAINST CRUEL SPORTS

we must insist the National Trust’s trustees listen and act. The trust must ban ‘trail’ hunting on its land for good. Other landowners should take note and immediatel­y follow suit.”

Polly Portwin, the Countrysid­e Alliance’s director of the campaign for hunting, said there is “absolutely no mandate for prohibitio­n of a legal activity which has been carried out on National Trust land for generation­s”.

She argued that adopting the motion “would totally undermine the Trust’s own motto: ‘for everyone, for ever’”, adding that the Alliance remains ready to work with the trust “to ensure that everyone can have confidence that trail hunting activity is open, transparen­t and legitimate”.

 ?? Danny Lawson ?? > Trail hunting may be prevented on National Trust land following a members’ vote
Danny Lawson > Trail hunting may be prevented on National Trust land following a members’ vote

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom