Guest guest Posted May 18, 2001 Report Share Posted May 18, 2001 South China Morning Post http://www.scmp.com Wednesday May 16 2001 by Peter Hadfield The hunter had the bear in his sights when he squeezed the trigger. There was a sharp crack, the bear keeled over, and the hunter rushed forward to examine his kill. What he found shocked him. Underneath the bear was the body of 81-year-old Yunosuke Sekiguchi, a hunter who had set out earlier that morning. He had been mauled by the bear, and suffered severe head injuries. The killing took place near Monbetsu on Japan's northernmost island of Hokkaido. The prefecture is home to thousands of bears which roam its open forests, and maulings are not uncommon. Sekiguchi, a steel-plate worker, was the third person to be killed by a bear in Hokkaido this year. He was one of 11 hunters who set out from Monbetsu that morning looking for a bear that had been reported in the area. Animal-lovers point out that usually it is the bears, not the hunters, who come off worse in these encounters. Despite its industrialisation, Japan is the only country with a sizeable bear population where the animals can still be hunted. There is a total population of about 10,000, comprising large brown bears in the north and smaller black bears in the south. Around 1,400 are killed every year, according to official figures, but animal welfare groups say the actual figure is much higher. There are few laws protecting them, and bears can be hunted and killed for the most trivial of reasons. Spotting one close to a tourist area is enough to send the local gun club on a bear hunt. Hunters are also allowed to kill a fixed number of bears every year for sport. Conservationists are concerned that another motive may soon appear: profit. As the authorities clamp down harder on the trade in endangered species, supplies of bear bile and bear parts from China are drying up. This has been a source for traditional medicine shops in Japan. The Government is not about to tighten up regulations at home that would protect the bears. And until now the public has shown little knowledge of or interest in the problem. But public apathy could be changing. Last week a small bear was shot in a tourist spot near Kyoto. Just over a metre tall and weighing 60kg, it wandered around a park for about four hours until it was killed by hunters. Such shootings are common, but the reaction this time was unusual. Over 100 people lodged complaints with the Kyoto prefectural Government, and many more protested to newspapers that reported the incident. They wondered why the authorities had ordered the bear shot when it posed no danger to the public, instead of tranquillising it and taking it back to the mountains. The authorities had never been confronted with such a reaction, and were stumped. Even when a cub bear was shot dead a few years ago in the north of Japan there was barely a murmur. 'It took time to obtain permission to use the tranquilliser gun,' a local government official told the Yomiuri newspaper. 'This bear appeared frequently. If we had taken it back to the mountain, it would have come down to the town again.' The local authorities had wanted to use Kyoto Zoo's tranquilliser gun, went the official explanation, but permission was needed from the police and the Environment Ministry. That also took time, and anyway it was not considered a viable option. 'We considered that use of the tranquilliser gun was inappropriate, because even though we had sought permission to use it, there was a possibility that the bear would escape and put tourists in danger,' said the official. The Government now admits that the approval procedure is cumbersome, and wants to be able to get its hands on tranquilliser guns more quickly when they are needed. Environmentalists say shooting small bears is not common sense. Gifu University's Toshio Tsubota, an expert on bears, said: 'We should seriously re-examine the procedure for obtaining approval for the use of the tranquilliser gun.' Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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