The Scotsman

Packs of dogs face ban from chasing foxes in new laws

● Bid to limit hunts to using just two hounds to ‘close loopholes’

- By LAURA PATERSON and LEWIS MCKENZIE

New legislatio­n will eradicate “potential loopholes” in Scotland’s fox hunting laws, the rural affairs minister has said.

Mairi Gougeon said the proposed new law will seek to limit the number of dogs which can be deployed against wild animals to two, except in circumstan­ces where using more is necessary.

Campaigner­s have called for an outright ban on fox hunting, arguing current legislatio­n is failing.

Fox hunting with dogs was banned in Scotland through the Protection of Wild Mammals (Scotland) Act in 2002, with an exemption for using dogs to flush out foxes for pest control or protecting livestock or ground-nesting birds.

Mounted hunts in Scotland have since offered farmers, landowners and estate managers a pest control service, but a review by Lord Bonomy in 2016 found there were “grounds to suspect” fox hunting takes place illegally and he recommende­d having independen­t monitors to police hunts.

Ms Gougeon told the Scottish Parliament: “Despite the ban on hunting introduced by the Protection of Wild Mammals Scotland Act 2002, it is clear to me that there remains considerab­le public concern about fox hunting in Scotland and doubts about the operabilit­y of the legislatio­n as it currently stands.

“I believe that Parliament should therefore be given the opportunit­y to consider the reform of the 2002 act, in the interest of furthering the welfare of wild animals. I plan to bring forward a bill to deal with this and other wildlife and animal welfare issues in the current Parliament.”

Ms Gougeon said the government is “specifical­ly trying to tackle any potential loopholes that are perceived to be in the legislatio­n at the moment”.

She added: “This is about closing loopholes, not creating any new ones.”

The proposed law would consider the need for a licence if the use of more than two dogs is necessary, in order not to “undermine the need for legitimate pest control”.

The bill would implement most of Lord Bonomy’s recommenda­tions, which include tightening up the language of the 2002 act for “consistenc­y and clarity”, considerin­g making landowners culpable for any offence committed during a hunt on their land, and MAIRI GOUGEON Rural affairs minister

0 Hunts can currently flush out foxes with packs of hounds but this is set to be limited to two dogs

extending the time limit for bringing prosecutio­ns.

Ms Gougeon said recommenda­tions which can be introduced without legislatio­n, including hunt monitoring and a code of practice, will be brought in as soon as possible.

Animal charity the League Against Cruel Sports Scotland said it is “cautious” about the potential for a new loophole in opt-outs to the two-dog limit, but it is confident the fresh legislatio­n will “address a major weakness in the law”.

The Scottish Gamekeeper­s Associatio­n warned two hounds will “not work”, adding that “reducing the ability to control foxes in forestry will be a disaster for wildlife and farm stock”.

“This is about closing loopholes, not creating any new ones”

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