- Inter Miami coach Martino leaving club for 'personal reasons' - club source
- Chinese man sentenced to 20 months for Falun Gong harassment in US
- Hong Kong court jails 45 democracy campaigners, drawing condemnation
- 'I did it for Rafa': Alcaraz after keeping Spain Davis Cup dream alive
- Alcaraz keeps Spain and Nadal Davis Cup dream alive
- Trump names China hawk Howard Lutnick commerce secretary
- Europe's pivotal role in bid to strike COP29 climate deal
- MotoGP champion Martin falls on Aprilia debut
- Bodies burned after Haiti police, civilians kill 28 alleged gang members
- 'Probably my last match': Nadal after Davis Cup singles defeat
- Iran faces new censure over lack of cooperation at UN nuclear meeting
- Afghan woman teacher, jailed Tajik lawyer share top rights prize
- Pressure mounts on Scholz over bid for second term
- Take two: Biden makes it into G20 leaders' photo
- Russia vows response after Ukraine fires long-range US missiles
- Spain's Nadal loses in Davis Cup quarter-finals singles opener
- Four elite Brazil officers arrested over alleged 2022 Lula murder plot
- SpaceX set for Starship's next flight -- with Trump watching
- Trump ally seeks to block trans lawmaker from women's restrooms
- Slovakia oust Britain to meet Italy in BJK Cup title match
- Top-selling daily French daily Ouest-France stops posting on X
- Russian invasion toll on environment $71 billion, Ukraine says
- 'Sabotage' suspected after two Baltic Sea cables cut
- 'You will die in lies!': daughter clashes with father at French rape trial
- Spain Women drop veterans Paredes and World Cup kiss victim Hermoso
- Stocks diverge on fears of Ukraine-Russia escalation
- New Botswana leader eyes cannabis, sunshine to lift economy
- 'Operation Night Watch': Rembrandt classic gets makeover
- Haiti police, civilians kill 28 gang members: authorities
- Taxing the richest: what the G20 decided
- 'Minecraft' to come to life in UK and US under theme park deal
- IMF, Ukraine, reach agreement on $1.1 bn loan disbursement
- Japan on cusp of World Cup as Son scores in Palestine draw
- Chelsea condemn 'hateful' homophobic abuse towards Kerr, Mewis
- Hamilton to race final three grands prix of Mercedes career
- Gatland has not become a 'bad coach' says Springboks' Erasmus
- Slovakia take Britain to doubles decider in BJK Cup semis
- Brazil arrests soldiers over alleged 2022 Lula assassination plot
- Ukraine war and climate stalemate loom over G20 summit
- Ukraine fires first US long-range missiles into Russia
- Retiring Nadal to play singles for Spain against Netherlands in Davis Cup
- Rain ruins Sri Lanka's final ODI against New Zealand
- Stocks sink on fears of Ukraine-Russia escalation
- Hendrikse brothers start for South Africa against Wales
- Macron tells Xi he shares desire for 'durable peace' in Ukraine
- Ruthless Japan beat China to move to brink of World Cup qualification
- French farmers threaten 'chaos' over proposed EU-Mercosur deal
- Brazil arrests G20 guards over alleged 2022 Lula assassination plot
- China's Xi urges 'strategic' ties in talks with Germany's Scholz
- Raducanu gives Britain lead on Slovakia in BJK Cup semis
CMSC | -0.2% | 24.574 | $ | |
RIO | 0.54% | 62.46 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.12% | 24.36 | $ | |
BCC | -2.71% | 137.81 | $ | |
RBGPF | -0.74% | 59.75 | $ | |
SCS | -1.15% | 13.05 | $ | |
NGG | 1.1% | 63.6 | $ | |
RYCEF | -2.54% | 6.68 | $ | |
RELX | 0.58% | 45.305 | $ | |
JRI | 0.11% | 13.245 | $ | |
GSK | -0.7% | 33.455 | $ | |
BCE | 0.16% | 27.275 | $ | |
BTI | 0.69% | 36.935 | $ | |
AZN | 0.52% | 63.72 | $ | |
VOD | -0.22% | 8.9 | $ | |
BP | -1.03% | 29.12 | $ |
As wolves swoop, Austrians grab guns for contested cull
After wolves swooped from the forest and savaged her lambs, Austrian sheep farmer Renate Pilz feels like giving up. Others, to the anger of conservationists, are reaching for their rifles.
"I lost two ewes and two lambs" to the wolf attack last year, the 55-year-old said at her farm in the village of Arbesbach.
She showed AFP photos of her animals, bleeding and so badly bitten that they had to be put down.
"It's too much work, it's no longer profitable and, above all, I don't want to do it any more," she said.
After disappearing in the 19th century, wolves have gradually returned to Austria in recent years. The number rose to 104 this year, up from an estimated 80 in 2022.
In response to a reported increase in attacks on livestock, several Austrian regions have authorised the controversial killing of wolves.
Environmental groups say the move violates European law, which lists them as protected animals.
Swelling wolf populations have dominated the headlines in the Alpine country and stirred emotion across Europe, with breeding packs recorded in 23 countries of the European Union.
- 'Wolf-free' zones -
A few kilometres from Arbesbach, Gerhard Fallent told AFP that three wolves had killed "half of his flock of sheep" and seriously injured the other half last year.
Fallent has since become a vocal proponent of regulating the wolf population, founding the association Wolf Stop.
He has called for "wolf-free" zones to be established near communities where people live and work.
After a wolf was sighted close to a bus stop frequented by children, school trips were cancelled and pupils picked up directly from home by the bus for a year, the 64-year-old lamented.
"We want our children to be able to go back to playing in the woods" in a region that can offer much to tourists too, said Fallent.
With family farms going out of business, he noted that several Austrian regions managed to significantly reduce the number of attacks after authorising killings.
- 'Obsolete' protection status -
In Austria's southern state of Carinthia, shooting wolves to protect local farms and their livestock has been authorised since 2022.
So far "we have killed 13 wolves," deputy governor Martin Gruber told AFP.
Putting up barriers such as fences in the rugged terrain, he argued, was "impossible" and above all a "waste of public money".
With the total population of wolves in the EU estimated at 20,300, Gruber said the predator's protection status was "obsolete" and should be lowered.
In 2023, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen called for the downgrading of the wolf's conservation status from "strictly protected" to "protected" in view of the "real danger" posed by the packs.
But conservationists across Europe have been up in arms, with environmental groups in Austria challenging the authorised killings in court.
In July, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruled that Austria should first try other solutions before hunting wolves massively, noting the local wolf population was "not at a favourable conservation status" and siding with the conservationists.
- Fairy tales -
Situated in the heart of Europe, Austria is rare in having three isolated wolf populations converge there from other parts of the continent.
After surviving "heavy hunting" about a century ago, wolves have started to spread due to being protected, and separate groups are linking up, said Marianne Heberlein, director of the Wolf Science Centre.
The operation, which claims to be the only one of its kind in the world, is attached to Vienna's University of Veterinary Medicine.
It researches the process of domestication by comparing the behaviour of the 10 wolves and 13 dogs housed at the centre.
It also aims to increase the public's awareness of wolves by familiarising people with the "wild animal" in a "neutral" way, said Heberlein.
The centre aims to do so "without glossing over the danger" they can pose or "giving them a bad image", she said.
The fear of the wolf "goes back a very long way in history", she said -- the age-old conflict between wolf and human has fed into the fairy tales told to children.
D.Johnson--AT