Cruelty claim as Kentish Town resident arranges fox shootings
Neighbour calls in ‘marksmen’ to remove animals from garden
Published: 2nd June, 2011
by JOSIE HINTON
A QUIET street has become the centre of an animal rights row after “marksmen” were called in to shoot foxes.
Residents near Talacre Park in Kentish Town staged a protest after a neighbour used a pest controller to cull urban foxes that had been digging holes in his garden.
The man, who has asked not to be named for fear of being targeted by animal rights protesters, said the foxes were living 12 feet from his bathroom and that he feared this was causing hygiene dangers.
He said he was advised culling was the best form of action as trapping foxes and then abandoning them in the wild leaves them open to starvation and attack.
But Karen Heath, who runs Camden-based animal organisation The Mama Cat Trust, posted leaflets through his neighbours’ doors in a bid to halt the killing after she saw foxes being trapped in the garden.
She said: “I was so upset when I saw a trap in his garden with a baby cub trapped in it. It was in great distress.
“I begged him to let me deal with the problem for free in a humane way. I offered to cancel my animal rescue trip to help him but he wasn’t interested.
“There are other more humane ways to make your garden uninhabitable for foxes.”
Experts estimate there are 16 foxes per square mile in London.
They have become a divisive issue, portrayed as either furry friends or dangerous pests.
Last year, pest controllers called for widespread culls after nine-month-old twins Lola and Isabella Koupparis, from Hackney, were reportedly mauled by a fox as they slept in their cots.
Shooting foxes in urban areas is not illegal if the hunter has the correct licence.
Yasmin Allen, who lives in Malden Road, said it was “absurd” that residents are forced to apply for planning permission to cut down a tree but are allowed to shoot foxes.
She added: “On top of that it is taking place right next door to a primary school and I think the last thing we want children to be hearing is gunshots during the school day.”
The Kentish Town resident behind the cull said the foxes had since moved on and he is currently seeking advice on preventative methods to stop them returning.
He added: “I am completely opposed to unnecessary cruelty like hunting with hounds, but I was concerned by the fact that I had foxes 12 feet from my bathroom, and right next to and underneath part of a primary school playground.
“I was advised to retain a pest control company. I asked this company about deterrent measures and employed chemical deterrent measures in tandem with humane trapping and destruction.
“Importantly, trapping and immediately abandoning foxes elsewhere is both illegal and extremely cruel, leading to starvation and attack by other foxes on the newcomers.”
Sue Royal, a spokeswoman from the RSPCA, said: “The most humane and long-term solution to discourage foxes from your garden is to remove or prevent access to what attracts them to the area.”