Call to phase out โinhumaneโ guga hunt by working with Hebridean islanders
Annual killing of infant gannets has been carried out on a remote Scottish island for at least 400 years Animal welfare campaigners have called for talks on phasing out the โinhumaneโ hunt for infant gannets known as guga, which are killed by hunters on a remote Scottish island
Annual killing of infant gannets has been carried out on a remote Scottish island for at least 400 years
Animal welfare campaigners have called for talks on phasing out the โinhumaneโ hunt for infant gannets known as guga, which are killed by hunters on a remote Scottish island once a year.
OneKind and the League Against Cruel Sports said it should be slowly phased out in dialogue with the Hebridean islanders who see the hunt, which has been carried out for at least 400 years, as a cultural pursuit and as sustainable food harvesting.
Both groups are highly critical of a โstunt-drivenโ campaign launched earlier this year by Protect the Wild, an anti-hunting group formed in 2015, and other activists, to force the case for a ban higher up the political agenda.
Their โcreative disruptionโ included a 60-hour occupation by Abolish the Guga Hunt of the roof of NatureScot, the conservation agency that licences the hunt, and a campaign by Protect the Wildโs founder, Rob Pownall, to win election to Holyrood dressed as a gannet.
Protect the Wild commissioned the Succession actor Brian Cox to narrate a graphic animated film ; Cox said the practice was โneedless crueltyโ. Pownall said: โGannet chicks are being snatched from their nests and bludgeoned to death for nothing more than a tradition.โ
Robbie Marsland, the director of League Against Cruel Sport Scotland and a veteran of campaigns opposing Icelandic whaling and seal clubbing in Canada, said those tactics had been counterproductive, entrenching support for guga hunting on Lewis in the Western Isles.
Marsland said he supported two petitions calling for a ban โ including a 183,000-signature one launched by Protect the Wild. However, he said, the best way to end the practice was through dialogue, by agreeing to a solution that โhonours and respectsโ the tradition.

