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France introduces €1,500 fine for drunk hunters

Hunters who are caught with a gun or bow in their hand while drunk face fines of €1,500 - or €3,000 for repeat offenders - under France's new laws aimed at cutting fatal accidents linked to 'la chasse'.

France introduces €1,500 fine for drunk hunters
Photo by Valentine CHAPUIS / AFP

Hunting in France is controversial – not only on animal rights grounds, but because of the numbers of fatal accidents that take place each season – some of which involve passers-by such as hikers, cyclists and dog-walkers being shot by mistake by hunters.

The government earlier this year announced a 14-point plan to improve safety around la chasse (hunting, which in France mainly means shooting) and on Sunday the new law was published in the Journal Officiel.

READ ALSO How to get through the French hunting season without getting shot

It decrees a fine of €1,500 for “being in a state of obvious intoxication while carrying a firearm or bow while hunting”. This would rise to €3,000 for anyone convicted more than once.

High profile cases of hunting accidents include people who have been caught in the crossfire while cycling or hiking, or shot while in their own gardens having been mistaken for a deer or a wild boar. 

In many cases of hunting accidents, the hunter who fired the fatal shot was under the influence of alcohol. 

However, hunting-related accidents have fallen steeply over the last 20 years following the introduction of several new codes of conduct and the tightening of the rules around licences and gun ownership.

In the 2022/23 hunting season, 78 accidents were recorded – of which six were fatal. All of those who died were hunters themselves, rather than passers-by.

The government’s latest hunting-related rules include, in addition to the €1,500 fines, an online platform for obtaining hunting licences and the standardisation of signs that hunts must put up to inform members of the public that they are hunting nearby. 

They rejected proposals to ban hunting on weekends or during school holidays, which some lobby groups had called for.

Hunting is a hugely popular activity in France, around 5 million people have shotgun licences and there are 1.03 million practising hunters in France. Every year, some 20,000 new hunters obtain their licence.

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CRIME

French court confiscates 9 chateaux from Chinese magnate

A French court has ordered the confiscation of nine Bordeaux wine country châteaux acquired by a Chinese magnate convicted of laundering Chinese government funds.

French court confiscates 9 chateaux from Chinese magnate

Naijie Qu, 63, head of the Haichang Group based northeastern Chinese port city of Dalian, was also sentenced to a suspended three-year jail term and fined one million euros.

The fine was €400,000 more than requested by prosecutors, who had asked for a four-year suspended jail term.

Haichang is a trading and shipping company which also has interests in property, tourism and agriculture.

It was the biggest of numerous Chinese investors which bought into one of France’s most famous wine-growing regions in the early 2010s.

French police seized the estates in 2018 after finding evidence of tax fraud and use of forged documents, including to obtain a €30-million loan by the Chinese bank ICBC’s branch in Paris.

The châteaux were put in the name of Qu’s wife in Hong Kong via a series of elaborately named shell companies in the tax haven of the British Virgin Islands.

China’s National Audit Office (NAO) has said that Haichang had been granted public money by state authorities to buy foreign technology, but had instead purchased vineyards in France.

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