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Dead crows outside the home of Chris Packham
Chris Packham said he would not be intimidated after dead birds were left at his home. Photograph: Chris Packham/Twitter
Chris Packham said he would not be intimidated after dead birds were left at his home. Photograph: Chris Packham/Twitter

Chris Packham defiant after activists leave dead crows at his home

This article is more than 5 years old

BBC Springwatch presenter condemns campaigners in row over ban on shooting birds

Chris Packham has said he will not be intimidated by campaigners who left two dead crows hanging outside his home and glued shut his security gate.

The broadcaster told police about the threats and vandalism, which came after the Wild Justice group he founded with fellow conservationists Ruth Tingay and Mark Avery successfully challenged the “general licence” that allowed the shooting of 16 species of bird, including crows, jays and woodpigeons.

It will be illegal to shoot these birds from midnight without an individual licence from Natural England, the government’s conservation watchdog. The ban has infuriated the game and shooting industry, as well as many farmers. Natural England will draw up a new system of licensing after a review of the ways in which “pest” bird species can be controlled.

“I’m not going to be intimidated,” Packham told the Guardian. “People like me with Asperger’s are not affected by this sort of thing. It doesn’t weaken our resolve. We’ve seen it this week with the trolling of Greta Thunberg. We don’t care about that sort of stuff. It’s a complete waste of time but it’s unpleasant for my family.”

Packham welcomed Natural England’s decision and said it was a chance for bird-killing regulations to move into the 21st century. The Springwatch presenter said he continued to support British farmers and that they had every right to control birds with non-lethal methods.

“For some reason, the usual nefarious interest groups have managed to whip up the farming lobby and people are lashing out because they realise that regulation is coming in a world that for so long has had such lax regulation,” he said. “They realise change is coming and it will be change for the better.”

The abrupt halt to the licensing system, which came on the day the influential environmentalist Tony Juniper took over as chair of Natural England, has been criticised by the National Farmers’ Union, the British Association for Shooting and Conservation and the British Game Alliance, which warned the ban on free pigeon shooting could affect 57 small game processing businesses that export game to Europe.

Tom Adams, the managing director of the British Game Alliance, said: “Tony Juniper has inherited the worst crisis in Natural England’s history. The pigeon sector is relied on by game processing businesses to keep them going through the ‘closed season’ of the spring and summer when no game birds like grouse and pheasant can be shot. Hundreds of jobs are at severe risk if a solution isn’t found.”

Packham has said he was spurred on to take action with Wild Justice after meeting a man shooting for pleasure in woods close to his home. “This man did not have a farm or business nearby but said he was ‘shooting vermin: jays, magpies and crows’,” he said. “They are not ‘vermin’. They are part of an ecological system and they are not doing him any harm. That isn’t about people’s livelihoods or the regulation of bird populations, that’s just wanton vandalism.”

Packham’s glued gate did not stop him getting to work to make a documentary about punk rock: instead of driving, he took a taxi to the railway station.

Asked by Packham on Twitter if it condoned the hanging of dead crows on his gate, Natural England tweeted back: “Of course we don’t condone this type of behaviour, it’s never justified no matter how strongly people feel about an issue.”

An online system enabling people to apply for individual licences to control birds such as crows and Canada geese went live on Thursday.

Natural England’s interim chief executive, Marian Spain, said: “This is not a ban on control, it is a change to the licences that allow control to take place. We have been very clear there will be new licences in place in the coming days that cover the vast majority of circumstances covered by the current licences to ensure landowners can continue to take necessary action, whilst also taking into account the needs of wildlife.”

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