Robins being killed and eaten

treesparrow

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
Headline -

More than a million songbirds, including Britain's favourite Christmas bird the robin, are being killed and eaten ever year in Cyprus, conservationists have warned.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/earthnews/6867249/Robins-being-killed-and-eaten.html

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Sheesh.... just how much meat can you obtain from the body of a 5 inch long songbird ?
 
This is “unbelievable and unacceptable” treesparrow. :(

The article says;
The birds are migrating to Cyprus for Christmas to escape winter in the Ukraine and other areas of north east Europe, rather than Britain.

The “...rather than Britain” it seems is a change?

Thanks for posting this – indeed what we do to our 2d world gives one pause; “limesticks coated with glue”, good grief.
 
Parallax said:
The article says;
The birds are migrating to Cyprus for Christmas to escape winter in the Ukraine and other areas of north east Europe, rather than Britain.

The “...rather than Britain” it seems is a change?

No change in migration patterns as regards robins in north east Europe as far as I know. A few might get pushed in the UK from the continent for a short while due to local cold weather movements. The vast majority of robins present in the uk are all year round residents. The "rather than Britain" comment is a bit superfluous.


The indiscriminate shooting and trapping of a wide range of bird species in certain north mediterranean countries has long been a problem for bird conservation organisations. In the 1990's, on a working holiday, I was involved in helping to count migrating raptors over the Pyrenean mountains and was amazed at the number of shooting platforms/butts strung out along the mountains tops (seemingly every half kilometre or so). Basically anything than flew within range was shot at - storks, buzzards, harriers and god knows what else and the sound of gunshot could be heard nearly all day long. :(

If the shooting were of large gamebirds like ducks and partridges for eating - that I could understand - but killing things for 'fun' is beyond my understanding.
 
Thanks for the ancillary information here Treesparrow.

…I was involved in helping to count migrating raptors over the Pyrenean mountains and was amazed at the number of shooting platforms/butts strung out along the mountains tops (seemingly every half kilometre or so). Basically anything than flew within range was shot at - storks, buzzards, harriers and god knows what else and the sound of gunshot could be heard nearly all day long.

First; great that you were involved in the bird counts and second, the last part of this is truly sad, yet not surprising with a civilization enamoured with shooting animals and humans; will not get started down this path as we know only to well of this.

… but killing things for 'fun' is beyond my understanding.

Age old question this is indeed with the answers surly embedded in human psychology as has been discussed well here in the forum, but it does not make it any easier to understand sometimes. :cry:
 
but killing things for 'fun' is beyond my understanding.

Psychopaths, they have no empathy, no conscious, no feelings, for them it's fun, everything that involves destruction is fun for a Psychopath, they can not feel the pain of another.

They only care about themself, man the more you start too see in how many ways this pathological disease has corrupted our planet, you start to get sick and want to trow up. :mad:
 
This short film on the trapping activity in Cyprus aims to explain how the situation of the birds in the country is getting more and more dramatic. A few weeks after the Conference on Illegal Killing of Birds which took place in Cyprus at the beginning of July 2011, BirdLife Cyprus published this video in order to create awareness of the reality of the facts in the island.

http://www.birdlife.org/community/2011/07/the-missing-visitors-in-cyprus-are-not-tourists-but-birds/

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As they say on TV some viewers may find certain scenes upsetting :(. Though it makes me mad :mad:.
 
10,000 dead songbirds seized from Romanian truck

Sold as a delicacy in Italian restaurants

November 2011: 10,000 dead songbirds have been seized in Hungary close to the Romanian border.

reed-bunting@body2.jpg


SONGBIRD SUPPER:
The birds, which included some reed buntings,
were bound for Italian restaurants

They were found in a Romanian truck, after officials became suspicious of boxes within the refrigerated consignment that appeared different to those containing meat and sausage products.

Skylarks, bluethroats, fieldfares and many more
Upon opening them, they discovered thousands of songbirds that appeared to have been recently shot. The majority were Eurasian skylarks, but the haul also included Calandra larks, red-throated pipits, bluethroats, European goldfinches, fieldfares, mistle thrushes, reed buntings and white wagtails.

Driver faces ten months in jail
The driver was arrested and has already been prosecuted under a fast-track procedure and now faces ten months' imprisonment.

In 2008, TRAFFIC highlighted the illegal trade in wild birds at a meeting of European Union (EU) government agencies involved in regulating wildlife trade in the region.

According to a TRAFFIC study, hundreds of thousands of wild birds were being illegally killed by highly organized criminals in south-east and central Europe who smuggled the carcasses to northern Italy to be sold as a delicacy in restaurants.

EU should find this illegal trade unacceptable

‘Despite TRAFFIC's earlier warnings, the illegal trade in songbirds within Europe clearly still continues - a situation the EU should find unacceptable and do its utmost to rectify,' said Katalin Kecse-Nagy, a senior programme officer with TRAFFIC.

The majority of bird species illegally hunted in Europe are songbirds, such as finches, warblers, pipits and buntings, which are protected under international treaties, EU and national legislation, particularly the EU's Birds Directive.

Illegal hunting in the European Union had shifted from Hungary to Bulgaria, Romania, Serbia and Montenegro, but also occurs in countries such as Bosnia and Herzegovina, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Albania and Croatia. The main transit countries are Slovenia, Croatia and Hungary, from where the birds are exported to Italy.


_http://www.wildlifeextra.com/go/news/songbirds-trade.html
 
Unfortunately the economic situation in Cyprus has forced some people back into this tradition :(

Cyprus jobless turn to illegal songbird trapping

By MENELAOS HADJICOSTIS
Associated Press

2067336_G.jpg

In this Nov. 3, 2012 photo, a man tries to free a bird caught on a sticky lime stick that poachers in Cyprus use to trap songbirds in his orchard in the Larnaca district of Cyprus.

NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) - It's just before first light and the bird-catcher strings nets among the orange, pomegranate, fig and carob trees in his orchard. The sound of chirping emanates from inside a massive carob - a trick sent from speakers to attract tiny songbirds. By mid-morning, the man disentangles about a half-dozen blackcaps, snaps their necks with his teeth and drops them in a bucket.

For centuries, the migratory songbirds have been a prized delicacy among Cypriots. They are also an illegal one, as entry into the European Union forced Cyprus to ban the tradition of catching the creatures, some endangered, in nets or on sticks slathered with a glue-like substance.

Now economic crisis is luring many out-of-work Cypriots back into the centuries-old trade. They risk stiff fines and even jail time by supplying an underground market for the tiny songbirds illicitly served up in the country's tavernas - but they say it's their only way to make ends meet.

Served whole either boiled or pickled, the fatty birds are such an ugly sight on a plate that outsiders find it hard to fathom how there could be any profit to be made from them. For many Cypriots, however, the tangy-sweet taste of the birds is pure bliss.

Supporters of trapping 'ambelopoulia,' as the blackcaps, robins and other warblers are known locally, ruefully reminisce about how until recently the practice was widely considered an ingrained part of local culture, one so lucrative that it sustained entire livelihoods and put countless kids through college.

That changed when Cyprus joined the European Union in 2004 and authorities began cracking down. Trappers were cast as greedy villains out to line their pockets without regard for the ensnared birds. The threat of a maximum €17,000 ($22,500) fine, a three-year jail term or both persuaded many to quit trapping.

It's difficult to say how many have again turned to trapping because they've lost their jobs. Even discreet queries are met by a wall of silence. Trust must be earned, especially in villages in the country's southeast, where ambelopoulia trapping is most prevalent.

But Andreas Antoniou, the head of the special police anti-poaching unit, said songbirds, hares and protected mouflon sheep have been at the center of a surge in illegal hunting island-wide that he blames on the economic crisis. He conservatively estimates a 10 percent spike in recent months, although the number of nabbed trappers has remained steady.

Authorities are alarmed.

"We're concerned that in light of the economic crisis, there are signs of increased poaching and illegal trapping of ambelopoulia," said Cyprus Game and Fauna Service Director Pantelis Hadjiyerou.

Martin Hellicar, a spokesman for conservationist group BirdLife Cyprus, says locals have confirmed that trappers who had given up the practice have been drawn back because of money problems, noting a "dramatic rise" in bird-trapping using both nets and "lime sticks" since last autumn.

The country's southeast straddles well-worn routes for birds migrating in spring and fall from Europe, Africa and the Middle East. Coincidentally, it also has one of the island's highest unemployment rates, running as high as 50 percent, according to local officials, with most of the job losses in the construction business.

"With the crisis, people are turning to poaching," says Liopetri Hunting Association President Costas Michael, surrounded by a half-dozen fellow hunters in the Association's cramped headquarters, replete with maps and life-size photos of hares and partridges hanging on the walls. "People who can't find a job know that there's money to be made just in their orchard."

Stavros Neophytou, president of the pro-trapping advocacy group Friends of the Lime Stick, puts it this way: "If you can't eat, what are you supposed to do?"

In headier times, trappers would earn around €40 ($54) for just a dozen birds, while restaurants would charge customers double that. But demand has dropped amid the crisis, says Game Fund Service official Petros Anayiotos, resulting in an ambelopoulia glut which, in turn, has meant prices at restaurants are down by as much as half.

Even with the plunge in prices, however, the cash enticement to trap birds remains high for those who have lost jobs. Trapping also gives the unemployed a way to fill their hours.

And for many Cypriots, bird-trapping is about more than the money.

Michael says it's about tradition that stretches back centuries. A book entitled "Xoverga" ("Lime Sticks") - a kind of unofficial bible for trappers - refers to a 16th-century English traveler named John Locke, who recounted how he witnessed hundreds of bottles of pickled ambelopoulia being exported to Italy during a visit to the then-Venetian ruled island in 1553.

Michael says his association strictly supports lime stick trapping because it's been passed down from father to son for centuries, but frowns upon the more modern and more indiscriminate mist nets.

"Like my father, I would wake up and go out to set traps and I would think of nothing else," says Michael. "Ambelopoulia aren't going to disappear, there's so many of them, how many can poachers possibly catch anyway? Birds are there to be eaten."

Michael says politicians let trappers down during the country's EU membership talks by not asking to allow lime stick trapping as a traditional form of hunting. EU officials say there's no going back to allow for such an exemption.

But for authorities and conservationists alike, the rhapsodizing about tradition simply rings hollow. Both lime sticks and mist nets are non-selective trapping methods that can ensnare threatened birds such as the cuckoo, golden oriole and nightingale.

Axel Hirschfeld, spokesman for The Committee against Bird Slaughter, a group that for several years has dispatched volunteers to the island to help stop trapping, scoffs at the idea that tradition justifies the culling of endangered birds.

"I come from any area in Germany where they used to burn witches," said Hirschfeld. "Maybe it's time for these traditions in Cyprus to go away as well."
_http://www.myfoxatlanta.com/story/20879016/cyprus-jobless-turn-to-illegal-songbird-trapping
 
As a native of the island, I am aware of this ugly tradition. I have been present during conversations among extended family members about the use of lime-sticks (xoverga): apparently some younger cousins were using them and the older hunter-proud uncles were arguing that it is a coward's "sport" to catch birds this way, but I don't think they ever came to any understanding. And at the time, it was just for "sport", not even to survive in a bad economic situation. I also heard wealthy people from the island reserving restaurants all to themselves (a company of 6-10 people) paying lots of money so that they get these illegally-hunted birds as a meal in secrecy. I don't remember now the amount of money, it was many years ago, but I remember I was shocked when I heard it.
 
This is pretty sad...also, if I were a songbird, I think I'd prefer being shot rather than stuck to a piece of wood and struggling to get off it, getting my feathers ripped off in the process..

from the first article said:
Robins, song thrushes and other birds are then sold to restaurants where they are made into a Cypriot delicacy of pickled or boiled birds known as ambelopoulia. A helping for one person could be up to a dozen birds.

A helping? What kind of type-o is that on the Telegraph? To write 'helping' instead of 'serving'...Or did I miss something? Is that the British word for the same?

from same article said:
However one of the trapping hot spots is on the British Sovereign Base Area of Dhekalia. Hundreds of thousands of British tourists also stay near where the birds are trapped.

....

He said the British authorities should be helping to stamp out the illegal activity on their doorstep.

from _http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sovereign_Base_Area said:
The only two Sovereign Base Areas are located adjacent to the Republic of Cyprus on the island of Cyprus, which was formerly governed by the United Kingdom.
Well, than maybe if they call it their doorstep they could try to do a little more to prevent these things from taking place..

same wikipedia page said:
Although both the United Kingdom and Cyprus are members of the European Union the SBAs in Cyprus are technically outside of the European Union.
Now I'm wondering if they can enforce anything if those two bases are technically outside of the EU.

Especially since later on they say that 'the British Government does not own all of the land. The British Ministry of Defence owns only 20 percent of the land,
with 60 percent privately owned (farmland) and the remaining 20 percent of the land being SBA Crown land, including forests, roads, rivers, and the Akrotiri Salt Lake.'

They probably can't really do anything unless they get those farmers involved. Even than, it seems complicated, actually getting something done to protect those birds..
 

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