Landowners ‘should be made to feel financial consequences of letting animals be shot’. The Independent reports
The RSPCA has called for a boycott of dairy products from parts of the West Country where badgers will be culled, saying that farmers and landowners should be made to feel the “commercial consequences” of allowing badgers to be shot on their land.
Launching a campaign against the badger cull alongside a coalition of animal welfare groups, Gavin Grant, the chief executive of the RSPCA, also said tourists should make the areas a no-go zone. “Those who care will not want to visit areas or buy milk from farms soaked in badgers’ blood,” he said. “Dairy consumers should be saying: I will not buy milk from areas where they are culling. Landowners and farmers allowing this to happen on their land have to realise there will be commercial consequences.”
The first trial cull licence was granted to a consortium in Gloucestershire earlier this week. A second licence, to shoot badgers in areas of Somerset, is likely to be granted in the coming days. The first night shoots could take place in a matter of weeks.
An alliance of 18 of the UK’s leading animal welfare groups yesterday launched a last-ditch campaign to stop the trial cull. They aim to attract 100,000 signatures to a parliamentary petition on the matter. Campaigners are also taking their case to Europe, arguing that the cull breaks the Bern Convention which protects EU wildlife.
Brian May, the Queen guitarist and head of the group Save Me, who is spearheading the campaign, said he would not drink milk from “the moment that the first badger is shot” in protest.
The cull is aimed at stopping the spread of bovine TB, which can be carried by badgers. Dairy farmers have been the hardest hit by the disease and many have backed the cull. Tesco and Morrisons said yesterday that they would continue to stock milk from regions affected by the cull. Waitrose, Marks & Spencer and the Co-op confirmed that they do not stock milk supplied from the area.
Mr Grant said farmers and members of the rural community opposed to the cull should act as “citizens of conscience” and oppose it “by all legal means”. Joe Duckworth, chief executive of the League Against Cruel Sports, said the trial cull posed an immediate threat to 6,000 badgers and warned that people could also be hurt.
Related articles
- Badger Update : Full-scale cull set to get government go-ahead (environmentaleducationuk.wordpress.com)
- Brian May and Team Badger step up war on ‘crazy’ cull (theweek.co.uk)
- Brian May launches campaign to stop ‘indefensible’ badger cull (standard.co.uk)
- Badger cull: First licence issued despite animal welfare outrage (express.co.uk)
- Brian May launches campaign against bager cull (independent.co.uk)
- Full-scale badger cull set to get government go-ahead (guardian.co.uk)
- First badger cull licence issued in England (guardian.co.uk)
- Badger cull is a shot in the dark (guardian.co.uk)
- Brian May: why I oppose the badger cull (telegraph.co.uk)
- Badger cull aims to curb TB in cattle (telegraph.co.uk)


[...] Badger latest : RSPCA calls for milk boycott as farmers prepare for cull (environmentaleducationuk.wordpress.com) [...]
Problem is it is hard to know where dairy products come from which are sold in supermarkets.