BirdLife Malta has motioned to a court to stop the spring hunting of the turtle dove, arguing that the governmental authorisation was illegal with no scientific basis.
A request for a warrant of prohibitory injection against the government was filed by the NGO on Monday morning. With Malta’s spring hunting season opened on Sunday morning, the hunting for turtle doves is set to kick off between April 17th and 30th with a national bag limit of 1,500 birds.
The moratorium on the hunting of the turtle dove, which was in place since 2017, was lifted by the ORNIS Committee last month. BirdLife said that it is requesting judicial assessment on how 2022’s spring hunting season was permitted.
Addressing a press conference outside the law courts in Valletta, BirdLife Malta president Darryl Grima said that the legal notice permitting this year’s spring hunting season for the turtle dove went against the European Birds Directive.
This directive supposedly supersedes any local law, with Grima saying that Maltese courts have the authority and responsibility to decide on any local actions which could breach European directives.
The ORNIS committee was described by BirdLife CEO Mark Sultana as acting like a government puppet. He said that hunters do not care about a declining species, pointing out that turtle dove has been classed as vulnerable by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature.
BirdLife’s head of conservation Nicholas Barbara highlighted how an EU Task force met on March 18th and advised a zero take approach to turtle doves in 2022. Barbara said the government tis failing its obligations to protect the species as well as ignoring the advice of international experts.
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