Press release from Greater Manchester Police and RSPB (4 June 2020)
Buzzard found shot twice in Peak District National Park
Greater Manchester Police and the RSPB are appealing for information after a buzzard was found shot near Diggle, in the Peak District National Park, on 11 May 2020.
[The shot buzzard had to be euthanized due to the extent of its injuries. Photo by Peak District Raptor Monitoring Group]
A member of the public found the bird dying on the ground and contacted the RSPB. However it had to be euthanized at a vets the next morning due to the extent of its injuries.
The body of the bird was x-rayed, and found to contain six pieces of lead shot. Further post-mortem analysis revealed that the bird had also been shot at an earlier occasion, but survived.
All birds of prey are protected by the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. To intentionally kill or injure one is a criminal offence and could result in an unlimited fine or up to six months in jail.
However the northern Peak District is a known hotspot for the shooting, trapping and poisoning of birds of prey. Nearby In 2018, a climber witnessed a red kite being shot out of the sky near Saddleworth, the same year that a tawny owl and a short-eared owl were found shot near Wessenden Head.
The RSPB’s Investigations Team recently reported a surge of potential and confirmed incidents of bird of prey persecution since lockdown. It is believed that the absence of visitors and raptor workers from key parts of the countryside may have served as an invitation to some to increase their efforts to kill birds of prey.
Jack Ashton-Booth, RSPB Investigations Officer, drove the dying bird to the vets. He said:
“To hold the body of a bird in your hands that’s been riddled with lead shot, knowing that you probably can’t do anything to save it, is devastating. That is the reality of raptor persecution.
We are grateful to the member of the public who reported this incident. If you find a bird of prey dead or injured in suspicious circumstances, please report it to the police. We’re certain that more birds will be killed than we ever find or hear about.”
A spokesperson for Greater Manchester Police, said: “Shooting a bird of prey is an offence under the Wildlife and Countryside Act and I would appeal to hear from anyone with information.”
If you have any information relating to this incident, call Greater Manchester Police on 101.
If you find a wild bird of prey which you suspect has been illegally killed, contact RSPB Investigations on 01767 680551 or fill in the online form here
ENDS
This is the buzzard that was featured in the BBC Look Northwest programme on Weds night (see here)
Disgusting beyond belief. What, what, what is the matter with people who do this and think it’s OK. Sickening. Evil.
Perhaps RSPB or GMP should invite that great expert on raptor persecution BASCs Duncan Thomas to see such injured birds or corpses for himself. It might help him overcome his current delusional view that he doesn’t know where the figures about raptor persecution come from and that it is a very rare crime committed by a tiny minority in the shooting world. Then he might choose not to attend in order not to learn the real truth, he is after all the northern director of the British Association of Sand Contractors and seems to have great difficulty seeing the truth even when not in his customary pose burying his head in the sand.
A horrible death about which words otherwise fail me.
The tactics at the moment that appear to be being deployed is to question the statistics and demand evidence of perpetrators. This is distraction tactics pure and simple. Many spinning trolls as well as paid advocates.
“The tactics at the moment that appear to be being deployed is to question the statistics and demand evidence of perpetrators”
Yes, absolutely. And so-called ‘birders’ on Birdguides are using it to shut down refutation.