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Email: timberwolfinfonetwork@gmail.com

French farmer in wolf-killing row

French farmer in wolf-killing row

By James Coomarasamy
BBC correspondent in Paris

A French sheep farmer has become the first person in France to be placed
under formal investigation for killing a wolf.

Thirty-five-year-old Herve Bernaudon, a sheep farmer from the Hautes-Alpes
region, faces six months in prison if he is found guilty of killing a
protected species.

It took French police two years to track down the alleged wolf killer.

The investigation began in the autumn of 2000 when a man out walking in
the Alps discovered the body of a wolf caught in a man-made trap.

A French environmental group immediately ordered an enquiry into the death
of an animal which is protected under the Bern convention.

The trail eventually led to Mr Bernaudon, who confessed to setting the
trap.

He is being investigated for destroying a protected species and could face
six months in prison and a 9,000-euro fine.

International protection

The sheep farmer told police that, in the months leading up to the
incident, 53 of his sheep had been killed by wolves and he was doing
nothing more than protecting his flock.

This could become a cause celebre amongst the French sheep farming
community, angered by the return of wolves to France a decade ago under
the protection of international law.

Dozens of shepherds and hundreds of sheep are expected to flock to the
court house in the town of Gap when Herve Bernaudon’s trial begins in the
New Year.

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