Cyprus Today

Convicted illegal bird trappers fined and jailed

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A TOTAL of 19 individual­s were successful­ly convicted for offences committed in 2016 related to illegal bird trapping, BirdLife [South] Cyprus has announced.

All 19 received fines, while seven of them also received suspended jail sentences

The last case with most severe sentences for two individual­s included fines of 6,600 euros and 3,200 euros and a 20-month jail sentence suspended for three years for one of the two individual­s.

“These are the most severe sentences for the 2016 operation. The same surveillan­ce method was used in autumn 2017 and more cases are currently under investigat­ion,” the announceme­nt said.

In autumn 2016, the Sovereign Base Area (SBA) Police worked with specialist RSPB Investigat­ions staff, with the support of BirdLife [South] Cyprus, and installed covert cameras at several key illegal trapping hotspots on the Eastern Sovereign Base Area in the South.

This was the first time this method of surveillan­ce was used in South Cyprus, the announceme­nt said. The 19 individual­s were the target of the surveillan­ce.

“The shocking footage shows individual­s removing the struggling birds from the mist nets then killing them with knives before tossing the bodies into buckets,” it added.

A report published by BirdLife [South] Cyprus revealed that an estimated 800,000+ birds were illegally killed on the Eastern SBA area in Dhekelia in autumn 2016.

The overall estimate, including South Cyprus, climbs to 1.7 million birds illegally killed in autumn 2016.

The report for the autumn 2017 trapping season is due out in the next couple of months.

“Illegal bird trapping is a persistent problem and these court sentences recognise that this is a serious wildlife crime,” said the announceme­nt.

BirdLife said that in addition to supporting covert surveillan­ce in the SBAs, it would continue pushing hard for action against law-breaking restaurant­s in the South that sell illegally trapped birds and also with its systematic monitoring as well as education efforts in schools and beyond, with the aim of reducing the demand that drives the bird killing.

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