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ANIMAL

Swedish county declares open season on pesky woodpecker

A resolute woodpecker has residents on the island of Öland off Sweden’s southeastern coast wanting to put down their hammers and reach for a handgun.

The ever-pecking pest has been putting holes in a group of homes in Törnbotten on the island’s western side, prompting residents to seek a culling permit from local authorities to rid their neighbourhood of the bird.

Leif Johansson, whose own house has been subject to repeated attacks from the woodpecker, expressed his frustration over the bird’s repeated assaults.

“There are fist-sized holes in the houses…it costs money to replace those boards. If it makes a hole in my house I need to tear down a whole wall,” he told the Expressen newspaper.

“This woodpecker is totally out of its mind.”

Residents have tried a number of other strategies to get rid of the woodpecker, including pounding nails and pouring tar into holes carved out by the bird’s constant pecking.

“The worst hit house has sixteen holes in a gable. It doesn’t peck like a regular woodpecker that’s looking for food; it never gives up,” said Johansson.

“Oddly enough, it’s only going after nice houses too; it’s totally senseless.”

The county administrative board recently issued a permit authorizing the bird to be killed in order to save homes from further damage.

But the challenge of hunting down and shooting the bird remains formidable.

“The woodpecker stays away when there are people around, so it’s not going to be easy to catch,” said Johnasson.

Nevertheless, he and his neighbours are confident the bird will be dead before the end of the year.

ANIMAL

Paris authorities to shut down bird market over cruelty concerns

The Paris city council on Wednesday agreed to shut down a live bird market operating in the historic centre close to Notre Dame cathedral, responding to rights activists who called it a cruel and archaic operation.

Paris authorities to shut down bird market over cruelty concerns
Photo: AFP

The bird market on Louis Lepine square in the centre of the French capital has long been a fixture in Paris, operating close to the famous flower market.

But Christophe Najdovski, Paris' deputy mayor in charge of animal welfare, said that the market was a centre for bird trafficking in France while conditions for the birds were not acceptable.

“This is why we are committed to changing the regulations to ban the sale of birds and other animals,” he said.

The closure had been urged by activists from the Paris Animals Zoopolis collective who had called the practice of showing the caged birds “cruel and archaic”.

France and Paris have in the last months adopted a series of measures aiming to show they are at the forefront of efforts to protect animal welfare.

The government said in September it planned to “gradually” ban mink farms as well the use of wild animals in travelling circuses and dolphins and orcas in theme parks.

Parc Asterix, which normally has some two million visitors a year, announced last month it would close its dolphin and sea lion aquarium.

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