MPs landslide vote to drop the cull

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Vaccinator releasing badger immediately after vaccination. Gloves and masks are worn throughout the entire process © Sam Stewart

Dorset Wildlife Trust (DWT) hopes that the first step to changing Government policy on badger culling has been taken, as a debate in the House of Commons saw 219 MPs vote in favour of the Government to drop culling, with only one who voted against it.

DWT welcomes the support for the motion put forward by Anne Main MP to halt the current policy, and believes it is the right decision to drop badger culling, with a priority given to a strategic vaccination programme.

Last year, pilot culls in Somerset and Gloucestershire ended in failure to meet required targets. In Somerset just 65% of the badger population was removed in a nine week period, when the cull aimed to remove at least 70% in six weeks. In Gloucestershire only 39% were removed in eleven weeks. 

Chief Executive of Dorset Wildlife Trust, Simon Cripps said: “This overwhelming vote in favour of halting the cull, which has failed in both Somerset and Gloucestershire, shows that MPs finally understand that culling is not the way forward in attempting to control thedisease Bovine Tuberculosis (bTB) in cattle. Dorset Wildlife Trust would like to encourage those farmers who favour a cull in Dorset to consider alternative options, such as badger vaccination.”     

DWT wants to see the eradication of the devastating disease Bovine Tuberculosis (bTB) and understands the serious implications for farmers who lose stock as a result, but believes there are more effective and reliable ways of controlling the disease, such as better biosecurity, badger vaccination and, in the long term, cattle vaccination. 

After fantastic support from the public for a badger vaccination, a five-year programme started on selected DWT nature reserves last autumn, to demonstrate that there is a safe, humane alternative to badger culling.

Simon Cripps added: “Dorset Wildlife Trust’s understanding from Defra is that if badger culling continues despite the failure of the pilots, it would be highly likely to start in Dorset in 2014, so now is the time for Government to make the hard – but right – decision to end culling and back a vaccination plan.”

To find out more information about DWT’s vaccination programme and to donate, please visit https://www.dorsetwildlifetrust.org.uk/badgers.html

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