People in Jarfjord Do Not Feel Safer After a Bear Is Shot
6 Articles
6 Articles
Animal rights activists prevailed: The state is not allowed to shoot a bear that attacked a man This is reported by VG. It is NOAH and the Association Our Predators that have gone to the district court with a request for a temporary injunction to stop the bear hunt in Jarfjord in Finnmark. – NOAH cannot see that there is any scientific basis for shooting the bears, especially when the animal is not considered to pose a greater danger than other…
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On Tuesday, the Norwegian Nature Conservation Service shot a male bear in Jarfjord. Residents say they don't feel any safer.
An experienced bear hunter believes it is incomprehensible that professionals shot a 48-kilogram male bear while hunting for bear cubs. The Norwegian Nature Conservation Service has now been notified.
The Environmental Board has set the initial hunting limit for bears this year at 71 individuals. The bear hunting season begins on August 1 and lasts until the end of October. The need for additional hunting permits will be reviewed on an ongoing basis, based on hunting and damage reports.
On Tuesday, the Norwegian Nature Conservation Service shot a male bear in Jarfjord, but there is uncertainty about which bear was involved in the incident.
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