MEDIA RELEASE
4 May 2012
Season of Suffering Starts This Weekend
Hunters are preparing for the open slaughter that is duck hunting season this weekend (Saturday 5 May) and animal
advocacy group SAFE is asking the wider public not to support this inhumane practice. While duck shooting may be
considered a ‘fun’ day out by a minority, it is expected one million waterfowl will be brutally shot and killed, or left
crippled, during the three-month season on New Zealand waterways.
Research conducted overseas indicates that duck shooters fail to kill up to a third of the birds outright, merely
injuring them. SAFE believes this means as many as 275,000 birds, including geese, swans and native ducks, may be left
crippled or left to die a slow and agonising death.
“The duck hunting season is indiscriminate slaughter by untrained and inexperienced shooters, many of whom go out on
just this first day of the season,” says SAFE Campaign director Eliot Pryor.
“The Department of Conservation has refused over the years to consider any research into the numbers of birds crippled,”
Mr Pryor says. “We believe this is because they do not want the answers, and that if the public knew the suffering
involved with duck hunting, the activity would be acknowledged as cruel and indefensible.”
SAFE is also concerned that despite the clear link between animal abuse and other types of violence, children are being
actively encouraged to take up this blood sport and being taught that it is acceptable to kill for no other reason than
fun. “SAFE regards as irresponsible the example duck hunting sets for children, from the use of firearms through to the
treatment of animals,” says Mr Pryor.
Duck hunting is banned in three Australian states due to the extreme suffering it causes, and SAFE will continue its
fight until this blood sport is no longer tolerated in New Zealand.
ends