SHARE
COPY LINK

BRIGITTE BARDOT

Bardot blasts Australia’s plan to slay wild cats

French actress Brigitte Bardot has condemned an Australian plan to cull two million feral cats to stop them harming native animals, a proposal animal rights groups said on Wednesday was unlikely to be successful.

Bardot blasts Australia's plan to slay wild cats
Brigitte Bardot has called the Australian plan "ridiculous". Photo: AFP
Feral cats have been identified as the main culprit behind Australia's high rate of mammal extinction, with more than 10 percent of species wiped out since Europeans settled there two centuries ago.
   
Environment Minister Greg Hunt has said the advice he has received is that the cats number 20 million across the country and devour countless native animals every night.
   
“They are tsunamis of violence and death for Australia's native species,” he told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation last week.
   
Hunt said a target of eradicating two million feral cats had been set for 2020, in addition to creating feral-free enclosures to aid the recovery of birds and mammals among other measures.
   
The government has stressed the eradication of cats will be carried out humanely, but Bardot urged the government to reconsider the plan which she said was “appalling” to the international community.
   
“This animal genocide is inhumane and ridiculous. In addition to being cruel, killing these cats is absolutely useless since the rest of them will keep breeding,” she said in the English translation of the open letter to Hunt.

   
(A look back at some of Bardot's films, courtesy of YouTube) 

Bardot, who said the money set aside to destroy the animals would be better spent on setting up a large-scale sterilisation campaign, said Australia's public image was being hurt by its culling of animals.
   
Earlier this year officials said that close to 700 koalas had been killed off in southeastern Australia because overpopulation led to the animals
starving, while feral camels and wild horses have been culled in the Outback to stop them destroying land.
   
“Your country is sullied by the blood of millions of innocent animals so please, don't add cats to this morbid record,” Bardot wrote.
 
Bardot is a known sympathizer of France's anti-immigration, anti-EU National Front.
 
She was pictured on Saturday with her arms around the party's Vice President Florian Philippot, see picture below, and in 2014 she declared that Party Leader Marine Le Pen could save France, calling her the Joan of Arc of the 21st century
 
   
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) said Wednesday that the culling of animals had been proven in the past to be ineffective and called on the government to look for long-term, non-lethal solutions including suppressing the cats' fertility.
   
“Not only is shooting and poisoning cats cruel, culls have been shown to be unsuccessful in the long term,” a spokeswoman for PETA Australia told AFP.
   
“The use of poison in suburban areas also puts domestic cats, dogs, and carnivorous wildlife at risk.”
   
Animals Australia said it was sceptical that the government's proposed measures would make a significant difference to the wild cat population.
   
“It's worth noting that the primary and most significant threat to the continued existence of Australia's native species is the destruction of their habitat and food sources,” said the organisation's Lisa Chalk.
 
 

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

BRIGITTE BARDOT

French sex symbol Brigitte Bardot to get statue in Saint Tropez

French screen goddess Brigitte Bardot will be be honoured Thursday in the Riviera resort of St Tropez, where a 2.5-metre (eight-foot) statue of the actress will be unveiled on her 83rd birthday.

French sex symbol Brigitte Bardot to get statue in Saint Tropez
AFP

 

Although Bardot was not born in the luxury seaside resort, she made her name by starring in the 1956 hit And God Created Woman, which was filmed in the town.

She moved there in 1958 and has lived in villas surrounding the town ever since. 

The 2.5m tall statue will sit opposite the local cinema museum, Le Musée de la Gendarmerie et du Cinéma which was opened in 2016.

“The town wanted to pay tribute to her. The link is very strong,” Claude Maniscalco, manager of Saint Tropez's tourist office, told AFP Marseille

“When you say Saint Tropez, people reply ‘Brigitte Bardot’,” he added.

The auctioneer Alexandre Millon has offered to loan the 700kg bronze statue, based on an Italian illustrator's drawings of a young Bardot, to the town. 

“She is a timeless star,” said Mr Maniscalco.

“She changed how women were seen and undeniably contributed to their liberation,” he explained.  

Bardot has not made any on-screen appearances for 40 years and has become somewhat of a recluse.

She will not attend the inauguration ceremony herself but her husband Bernard d’Ormale will be at the event instead on Thursday at place Blanqui.

Nevertheless, the film star handwrote a note to the Saint Tropez’s residents. 

“With tears in my eyes, I’m writing to you all to say a big thank from me for giving me this immense honour of a magnificent statue that immortalizes the woman the God created in Saint Tropez!!”, she said.