No more shooting to scare Pyrenees Brown Bears, French court rules
https://www.thelocal.fr/20210206/no-more-shooting-to-scare-pyrenees-bears-french-court-rules
6 February 2021
Livestock owners in the French Pyrenees can no longer fire warning shots to scare off endangered bears, a court ruled on Friday, handing a victory to animal rights groups who warned of the risk of accidental deaths. Tensions over the presence of brown bears in mountains separating France and Spain have run high since a re-introduction effort was launched in the mid-1990s.
Farmers were furious when the government stepped up its efforts with a 10-year "bear plan" in 2018, mounting fierce protests when the first female was brought in by helicopter that year. They say the warning shots are needed to keep the predators from killing sheep and other livestock or destroying bee hives, and authorities began allowing them on a trial basis in 2019. But the State Council, the country's top administrative court, struck down the measure after around a dozen pro-bear associations filed a complaint. It said warning shots are not compatible with "maintaining the populations in their natural environment." Contacted by AFP, the environment ministry did not immediately comment.
In a joint statement, the associations welcomed the ruling, saying the decree "made it possible to get around the ban on intentionally disturbing a protected species." Three bears were killed in the Pyrenees last year, including one by a hunter who said he acted in self-defense. In January, the European Commission called on France to rapidly carry out new re-introductions to replace them, as called for in its "bear plan."
An educational brochure on Bears in the Pyrenees
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Omu8baqgxyqlPGe3qjRF4ONgzVBs-Xkn/view?usp=sharing