New badger culling trials given go ahead across England:;
Badger culls are to be carried out in five new areas of England in a bid to control bovine TB.
Shooting
of badgers will begin in early September in South Devon, North Devon,
North Cornwall, West Dorset, and South Herefordshire.
Culling is part of the government's 25-year-strategy
to eradicate the disease, but opponents say there is no evidence culling
is effective.
Dorset, Gloucestershire and Somerset are already practising culling.
More on the extension of the badger cull trials
The
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) would not
confirm the selections had been made but said it was "currently
considering applications for further badger control licences as part of
the usual licensing process".
However, that culling companies have already been selected, and marksmen trained for the new locations.
Tony
Francis, a farmer who had TB in his herd near Okehampton in Devon, said
he had signed up to one of the new cull zones to try to prevent the
disease from returning.
'Take control'
"It's an issue which has been going on for decades," he said.
"No one has really got on top of it. I think the agricultural industry feel we've got to try and take control of it," he said.
According
to Defra, England has the highest rate of bovine TB in Europe, which
results in thousands of cattle being slaughtered every year.
But anti-culling campaigners say there is no evidence that killing badgers is reducing the level of TB in cattle.
Jenny Pike, of campaign group Devon and Cornwall Against the Badger
Cull, said only 6% of TB cases in cattle came through badgers and the
government should focus on curbing cattle-to-cattle transmissions.
"It
really is not a good use of taxpayer money, and it's going to cost
thousands of badgers their lives for no benefit at all to farmers," she
said.
In March hundreds of protestors campaigned
against the plans to introduce culling in Devon and a significant
policing operation has been planned in case of disorder when culling
begins in the new locations in September.
Culling in
Gloucestershire is expected to be extended, while those in west Somerset
and north Dorset are due to continue.
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