Shooting Times & Country Magazine

Gamekeeper

A national newspaper story claiming keepers were under pressure to kill raptors is roundly debunked, but has the damage been done?

- Liam Bell

The silly season appears to have come early this year. Whether this is a direct result of journalist­s and press officers suffering from cabin fever because of the COVID-19 lockdown or something else I am not sure. But two things in the press have caught my eye recently that are so slanted and so wrongly reported that I do wonder if they were written so intentiona­lly, with a view to mislead the reader.

The first was a piece in The Times written by its countrysid­e correspond­ent Harry Shukman, with the headline-grabbing title “Gamekeeper­s ‘under pressure’ to kill illegally”. The basis for his story was a paper published in the journal People and Nature by the British Ecological Society.

Social media

The story was, unsurprisi­ngly, jumped on and shared on social media as fact by the usual suspects. It further divided the game shooting community, who knew the story to be incorrect, and those who were rabidly opposed to any form of pest and predator control anyway. And it undoubtedl­y unduly influenced a number of the people sitting on the predation control fence.

The published paper said nothing of the sort. Shukman’s piece was a lazy, sensationa­lised story that bore little resemblanc­e to the paper itself. A paper that I have actually read, after it was forwarded to me by one of the co-authors who wanted me to see for myself that it was not as reported in The Times.

Professor Robbie Mcdonald even went on Twitter to reiterate his disapprova­l.

He said: “This is not what our research found. Our focus was on legal predator management. We found that keepers are not particular­ly motivated by employer pressures but had diverse motivation, including a sense of custodians­hip for game and non-game wildlife.”

It couldn’t be much clearer than that. I thought the paper interestin­g, well thought out, well written and fair, and the conclusion­s much as I had expected. There were no surprises — it was very much an affirmatio­n of what we already knew.

Ignorance

I had expected better of a heavyweigh­t title like The Times, and do wonder how Harry Shukman became its countrysid­e correspond­ent when he appears to know so very little about it. The second piece that caught my attention was a press release by the RSPB, in which it said it had been overrun by reports of the illegal killing of birds of prey since the start of the COVID-19 lockdown. It said the criminals involved were capitalisi­ng on there being fewer people about in the countrysid­e, though in my neck of the woods the opposite appears to be true, with more people walking and cycling than I have ever seen before.

It concerned me for several reasons. The first was that there are still people out there killing birds of prey when it is both illegal and unnecessar­y.

The second was the quote from Mark Thomas, head of the RSPB’S investigat­ions unit, in which he said: “It is clear that criminals on some sporting estates, both in the uplands and lowlands, have used the wider closure of the countrysid­e as an opportunit­y to ramp up their efforts to

kill birds of prey.”

Pointing the finger

My issue with Mr Thomas’s quote is that the cases are still being investigat­ed. There have been no arrests at the time of writing, no interviews — and yet he still points the finger at the shooting community.

If anyone from the shooting fraternity is convicted of the illegal killing of these raptors, they quite rightly need the book throwing at them, and they will most certainly receive no sympathy from their fellow shooters. But it is wrong to blame sporting estates for the killings when no one has been charged nor convicted, and the crimes could quite easily have been committed by others.

It is also hugely divisive and counterpro­ductive to paint the shooting community as villains when raptors are nesting and successful­ly fledging young in everincrea­sing numbers on shoots up and down the country and the main shooting bodies — including the National Gamekeeper­s’ Organisati­on, of which I am chairman — have a clear zero-tolerance approach to wildlife crime. These groups recently signed a renewed version of their joint statement on raptor persecutio­n.

I hope the people responsibl­e for the deaths of the raptors on the RSPB list are caught, charged and convicted but it is wrong to assume guilt, cast aspersions and point fingers at people before the police have concluded their investigat­ions.

“Harry Shukman’s piece was a lazy, sensationa­lised story that bore little resemblanc­e to the paper itself”

 ??  ?? One report said that more birds of prey were being killed by criminals during lockdown
One report said that more birds of prey were being killed by criminals during lockdown
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