Deal eyed to curb wild horse slaughter
Foundation would offer cash, expertise to halt roundups within Navajo reservation
The first effort of its kind to prevent wild horses roaming the Navajo Nation in the Southwest from being sent to slaughter in Mexico has gained the preliminary approval of tribal leaders, former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson said.
Under a draft agreement that the tribe must review, a foundation established by Richardson and actor Robert Redford would provide money and expertise to the Navajo Nation to halt reservation roundups that have seen thousands of wild horses shipped to slaughterhouses in Mexico.
The impact of intensive grazing by wild horses in a high-desert reservation that spans more than 27,000 square miles of New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado and Utah has been compounded by drought and led to competition with livestock for sparse vegetation, said Rick Abasta, spokesman for Navajo Nation President Russell Begaye.
The roundups by the nation’s agriculture department and the fate of the captured animals has ignited controversy among the tribe’s more than 300,000 enrolled members, including wild horse advocates, Abasta said.
The issue has divided a tribal nation whose economy relies in part on freerange cattle and sheep but which also reveres horses.
“The Navajo elders have a saying which translates into English as horses are sacred,’” Abasta said.
Richardson, whose second term as New Mexico governor ended in 2011, said he and Redford formed the Foundation to Protect New Mexico Wildlife with the aim of aiding wild horses.
“Our main objective is to stop the roundups and stop the horse slaughter,” said Richardson, who said Redford is a fellow horse enthusiast who owns a home in New Mexico.
Richardson said the agreement would first seek to identify the number of wild horses on the reservation, where esti-
‘Our mates have ranged from several thousand to more than 70,000.
If ultimately approved, the deal, which proposes such methods as birth control to keep wild herds in check, would be the first of its kind on Indian lands and perhaps in the nation, he said.
“The Navajos are the biggest tribe in the country. If we strike an agreement here, it will set an example for other tribes that still slaughter,” Richardson said.
Abasta said the nation’s newly elected president is seeking feedback from tribal members.