Malta: Poachers illegally target male Pergerine

maltese poachers target peregrine

Loathsome. A male Peregrine deliberately targeted by men in a speedboat. Once again, we’d like to know how Malta’s hunting mouthpiece, the widely discredited FKNK, will spin this disgraceful act of vandalism and stupidity…

 

Maltese Falcon feared gunned down by poachers

Press-release from BirdLife Malta: 17 July 2012, Malta

  • Bird-watchers and conservationists fear for the fate of a male Peregrine Falcon (also known as the Maltese Falcon) residing in Gozo, after an organised illegal hunting attempt from land and sea was witnessed at Ta’ Cenc cliffs in Gozo last Saturday.

    During an evening boat trip attended by 120 BirdLife Malta members to watch rafting Cory’s Shearwaters off Ta’ Cenc, attendees were alerted by shots fired from the cliffs. Witnesses saw three men with a shotgun in a speedboat below Ta’ Cenc cliffs who appeared to be coordinating with another two men on the cliffs, one of whom was also armed with a shotgun.

    BirdLife members reported the illegal hunting incident to the Armed Forces of Malta, who arrived with a patrol boat within five minutes. The poachers fled the scene at great speed heading towards Xlendi as soon as the AFM vessel was seen approaching.

    The targeted bird is one of a resident pair that had been seen regularly at Ta’ Cenc until May of this year when the female of the pair was reportedly killed by illegal hunters. It is now feared that the male has also been killed.

    The Peregrine Falcon, Falco peregrinus brookei, became synonymous with Malta in 1530, when the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V ceded the islands to the Knights of St. John in exchange for one Maltese Falcon per year.

    The Peregrine Falcon was a regular breeder in Malta, until the last pair was killed by poachers in the 1980’s. Since then Peregrine Falcons have only made sporadic appearances along the more remote cliffs of the Maltese Islands.

    “When the incentive to kill a unique specimen like the Peregrine Falcon outweighs the penalties faced in court, poachers go to the extremes of organised crime. It is evident that the alleged efforts of the government to clamp down on illegal hunting are failing, with birds such as the Maltese Falcon being prevented from making a comeback due to illegal shooting,” said Nicholas Barbara, BirdLife Malta Conservation Manager.

     

    For more information contact:
    Nicholas Barbara, BirdLife Malta Conservation Manager on + (356) 79255697
    Office: + (356) 21347644-5
    www.birdlifemalta.org

     

    * The Peregrine Falcon, also known as the Maltese Falcon, used to breed regularly in the Maltese Islands until the last pair was killed in the 80s.

 

 

BLMlogo Malta: more petulant nonsense from the hunting federation

The BirdLife Malta website: http://www.birdlifemalta.org

BirdLife Malta is part of an international network of fully co-ordinated ringing stations and National Ringing Schemes that have been indispensable for the efficient management of scientific bird ringing in Europe. We are the leading voice in ensuring that Malta’s hunters WILL conform with EU Directives and spring hunting will be banned in accordance with those directives. Birdlife Malta currently manages two nature reserves, Ghadira and Is-Simar, and also joint manages an afforestation project known as Foresta 2000 (located adjacent to Ghadira): the two nature reserves are both Ramsar-designated wetland areas and represent the largest free-standing sources of in Malta.

 

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About the author

A passionate conservationist, vegetarian (and dairy-free since last week), I live on the Great Chalfield Estate in the Wiltshire (UK) countryside with my wife and daughter. I birded all over the world for twenty years before quitting my airline job in July 2010, and am now freelance. Follow me on Twitter @charliemoores

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