Swiss big game hunters kill some 50 protected animals abroad each year, according to Swiss television SRF. Hundreds of protected animals have been imported into Switzerland as trophies, but there are calls for tighter rules.
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2 minutes
SRF/jc
Between 2010 and 2018, authorities allowed the import of 423 protected animals that had been hunted mainly in Africa but also Canada, Mongolia and eastern Europe. They included lions, leopards, elephants, hippos, rhinos and Argali mountain sheep, as well as a rare wolf that is strictly protected in Switzerland.
“It is a sign of decadence and barbarism to hunt endangered species,” says Green parliamentarian Meret Schneider, who wants the rules tightened. “The hunting of large predators, but also of elephants, should be banned.”
Swiss safari entrepreneur Stephan Stamm, who leases a hunting ground in Tanzania for wealthy customers from all over the world, has a different view. “It is correct that we also hunt lions and leopards,” he says, “but hunting is strictly regulated and restricted to old and male animals.”
Those who want a leopard in his hunt pay over $50,000 (CHF46,000) for it, according to Stamm, and 30-40 percent goes to the authority that manages the reserves in Tanzania. “Without the income from hunting, there would be more poaching and also illegal deforestation,” he told SRF.
But opponent Schneider says these are just “excuses to justify hunting”. She is convinced that game reserves could be financed more sustainably with photo tourism or donations.
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Trophy hunters pay thousands to kill iconic Swiss animal
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Previously extinct in the Swiss Alps – and prized for their impressive horns – ibex have become a valuable source of income in western Switzerland.
Swiss parliament agrees to loosen protected species hunting rules
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Parliament has agreed to ease rules that regulate the number of certain protected species, making it easier to shoot wolves in the Swiss Alps.
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