Bird-trapping in Malta found to violate EU law
June 21, 2018Hunters in Malta who trap and trade several varieties of finch birds are in violation of EU law, the European Court of Justice (EJC) ruled on Thursday. The case had been brought to the court by the European Commission in 2015.
The Maltese government responded to the ruling by saying it would study the court's decision.
Thursday's EJC ruling concluded that recreational trapping in Malta is unlawful because birds were not being trapped on a selective basis, or in small numbers.
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A cultural tradition
In Malta, the trapping of birds is a centuries-old tradition and one that has the support of the Maltese government, which reintroduced the controversial bird-trapping practice in 2013.
This practice, however, is illegal everywhere else in the EU. Under European law, member nations can be exempted from regulations protecting specific bird species, but only if hunting can be done in controlled conditions.
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The Maltese government was hoping that Malta country could qualify for this exemption.
But the court ruled that Malta had not met the requirements, due to the fact that the island nation was not able to control the practice enough to guarantee the survival of the species.
"The Court notes in particular that, according to a 2007 study by the nongovernmental organization BirdLife Malta, trapping in Malta is so intensive that only a handful of each of the common finch species regularly breed on the islands, whereas they breed in high numbers in other areas of the Mediterranean," the ECJ added.
If it fails to comply with the ruling, Malta would be faced with a fine.
Bird rights groups rejoice
The German-based NGO Committee Against Bird Slaughter reacted with satisfaction to the ruling, saying that the EU institutions "finally showed their teeth" against Malta's illegal practices.
Malta's BirdLife celebrated the ruling and noted that it makes the case for repealing the government's bird trapping law.
Hunters' organizations rejected the court's decision, calling it unjust and blamed BirdLife Malta for influencing the court with "alarmist arguments."
jcg/rc (Reuters, dpa)