HUNT SABOTEURS WERE OUT IN FORCE OVER THE HOLIDAY PERIOD TO MONITOR AND DISRUPT
HUNTS ACROSS THE UK
~ punkacademic ~
With a ban on trail hunting looming, sabs reported that hunt organisers were in
melancholic mood — though this didn’t prevent the usual carnival of death taking
place in numerous locations including Devon, Dorset, Kent, Leicestershire,
Oxfordshire, Northamptonshire, Somerset, Staffordshire, Warwickshire, Wiltshire,
and the Isle of Wight.
Trail hunting — the supposed practice of hounds following a scent rather than a
live animal — has long been a cover for actual fox hunting since the official
ban on hunting with dogs was became law in 2004.
Last week the government announced plans to ban the practice, immediately
opposed by Nigel Farage’s far-right Reform UK party. Farage himself attended a
hunt in Kent on Boxing Day.
Attendance at some hunts was paltry, with South Hampshire Hunt Sabs reporting
only seven riders for the Hursley Hambledon hunt at Chilbolton Down, albeit
accompanied by four “quad bikes with masked terriermen”. This mirrored an
intimidatory posture by a number of hunts across the country, with masked
terriermen a constant presence despite a ban on their attendance at events by
the British Hound Sports Association.
The 3 times convicted Seavington Hunt invade Crewkerne. Image: North Dorset Hunt
Saboteurs on Facebook
Spectacular successes were achieved by sabs in the Severn Valley, where the
Dummer Beagles were prevented from hunting altogether, and in Dorset, were two
foxes were saved by sabs from the Blackmore and Sparkford Vale Hunt. The hunt in
question had seen four of its number convicted in April for illegal hunting.
Peterborough Hunt Sabs also forced the Fitzwilliam Hunt to pack up early at
Stilton.
Sadly, animals were harmed and killed up and down the country, with a deer
mauled to death in Dorset, a badger sett destroyed at Okehampton, and hunters
filmed whipping their own hounds in Wiltshire. Traffic was endangered in
multiple locations as horses and dogs raced across roads.
The use of drones by sabs has been particularly effective in disrupting hunt
activites, and providing evidence for potential prosecutions, though sab groups
are quick to note that in many areas the police are uninterested in pursuing
breaches of the hunting ban.
With legislative action on trail hunting now part of the government’s proposed
animal welfare strategy, hunting advocates including the Countryside Alliance
were accused by sabs of the ‘gaslighting of a nation‘, as they employed a
rhetorical strategy of pitching rural against urban.
Claiming that a trail hunting ban amounted to a ‘war against the countryside’,
pro-hunting groups ignored the reality that the majority of Britons, urban and
rural, oppose hunting. Sabs know however that to trust in government would be
foolish – legislative action over two decades ago failed to eliminate the
persecution of foxes, and with Labour’s penchant for u-turns there is no
guarantee a ban on trail hunting will ever make it into law.
Instead, sab groups across the country are continuing to watch and disrupt hunts
wherever they raise their heads, utilising tried and tested methods of direct
action to rid the country of a vile elite practice which garners the support of
nationalists and far-right figures as an emblem of ‘tradition’.
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Top image: Weymouth Animal Rights on Facebook
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