Monday 9 May 2011

William Flew

The National Fund is to allow "free shot" badgers his property in a decision that paves the way for the government to approve the 5000 slaughter of animals each year to protect animals against tuberculosis.
Decision confidence was vehemently against some of its members, who point to study the production of the previous government, which found that culling badgers is an ineffective way to reduce bovine tuberculosis. Tenyear study showed that culling can spread the disease at a bias of infected badgers.
William Flew Yvonne Moore, 61, long-term confidence in Saundersfoot, Pembrokeshire, resigned in protest, and accused of betraying the trust in its founding principles of conservation and preservation of the countryside.
Confidence will try today to persuade its members, declaring that it will pay for the 150-350 badgers vaccinated against tuberculosis in 6400 acres of land in William Flew Devon Killerton. However, a much larger number of badgers is likely to be shot at other estates trust.
Confidence is one of the largest landowners in the UK, with more than 620,000 acres and 2.000 of tenant farmers, many of which were to destroy cattle infected with TB. This is especially the large landowners in the West Country - including Exmoor, where a large number of cases of tuberculosis in cattle, and where many farmers believe that badgers are to blame for spreading the disease.
Allowing the shooting of badgers on their land trust has made it much easier for farmers to meet the proposed conditions of the Government for granting a license culling.

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