Badger cull: rocker Brian May threatens legal action

Natural England expected to license a third year of badger culling in Somerset and Gloucestershire

Brian May
(Image credit: Getty)

Queen guitarist Brian May has threatened legal action if the divisive badger cull in Somerset and Gloucestershire goes ahead again this year.

Natural England is expected to announce the licensing of a third year of culling in the two counties and might even extend the pilot to Dorset. Ministers and farmers claim the culling is needed to tackle TB, which is spread from badgers to cattle.But lawyers instructed by May's Save Me Trust have warned Natural England they will challenge the legality of the cull with a judicial review in the High Court if it goes ahead.The Save Me Trust argues that the cull is unlawful because it does not "rationally serve the statutory purpose which permits the killing of badgers only to achieve the aim of preventing the spread of disease".The Trust claims there has also been a "fundamental failure in the consultation process, a logically flawed approach in calculating badger numbers and a failure in Gloucestershire in any event to meet its minimum targets in 2013 and 2014".Last year, it was estimated that a minimum of 615 badgers would need to be killed to reduce TB in livestock in Gloucestershire – but only 274 badgers, 45 per cent of that target, were culled. The government blamed the "challenges of extensive unlawful protest and intimidation" by anti-cull campaigners and promised to extend the cull to areas where tuberculosis was rife in cattle, reports the Bath Chronicle.A significant proportion of badgers in both areas were killed by cage trapping and shooting, rather than "controlled shooting" of free-running badgers, says the newspaperAn independent expert panel, commissioned by the government and published last year, said that the pilot culls were "inhumane and ineffective in dealing with the problem of TB in cattle" and that too many badgers took more than five minutes to die. The government claimed it would take the panel's recommendations on board, but has not asked for a follow-up review. Campaigners have called for alternative strategies, such as badger vaccination.

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