Guest guest Posted May 7, 2001 Report Share Posted May 7, 2001 Beattie orders rangers to keep shooting dingoes Matthew Franklin and Brian Williams (The Courier Mail - Queensland, Australia) 07may01 PARK rangers should shoot any Fraser Island dingo that threatened humans despite the end of an approved dingo cull, Premier Peter Beattie said yesterday. Mr Beattie said he expected park rangers on the island to use their initiative to deal with dangerous animals after the tragic death of Clinton Gage, 9, last week. He said rangers had destroyed 28 dingoes under a targeted kill of dogs that frequented camp grounds and parks but that they should kill any other dog that posed a threat to humans despite a heavy backlash against the cull. Federal Environment Minister Robert Hill yesterday accused Mr Beattie of failing to properly address dingo management despite producing a draft management plan two years ago. " It seems the difficult issues were put to one side, " Senator Hill said. " We've now had a tragic event and it's brought a fairly dramatic response. " Mr Beattie said he was unbowed by continuing criticism from environmentalists over the cull, saying many appeared to rate the lives of dingoes as more valuable than the lives of children. When told that dingoes were still present in camping grounds this weekend, Mr Beattie said park rangers should act on their own intitiative. " If there is a dingo found that is a risk to people I expect parks and wildlife people to put it down now, " Mr Beattie said. " I expect them to put it down without telephoning me. That is their job. " Mr Beattie said the Government was now continuing with a risk-analysis study aimed at determining whether more dingoes should be culled or whether other steps were necessary, such as fencing off of camping areas on Fraser Island. Senator Hill said he would not quarrel with the Queensland Government taking action to boost public safety, but he was bemused by the decision to begin the cull before conducting a risk assessment. " I was puzzled and remain puzzled, bemused in fact, about the notion of destroy the animals and then conduct your risk assessment, " he said. " I would have thought it was logical to conduct your risk assessment and then act upon it, but the Queensland Government went in the other direction. " Fraser Island Defenders Organisation secretary Billie Watts said a lack of funds was the core issue behind the failure of dingo management. She said Fraser had been left to subsist on access fees which had not been increased for years and the Environmental Protection Agency and Parks and Wildlife Service had failed to deliver their share of consolidated revenue to help manage the island. She said the Federal Government also had to share the blame. To date Fraser had only received 1.28 per cent of Federal Government 2000-2001 allocations for World Heritage sites. Ms Watts said it was wrong large numbers of dingoes were being shot out of hand . . . " if a collie savaged you, you wouldn't have every dog killed in the street " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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