Ian 'Beefy' Botham has
gone public with strong criticism of the RSPB.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2805710/RSPB-spends-quarter-cash-saving-birds-Sir-Ian-Botham-leads-landowners-blast-charity.html
http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/the-vampire-squid-rspb-attacked-by-other-conservationists-for-misusing-funds-9814685.html
Much of what he's said I've said myself, sometimes here on this blog. But I'm suspicious of his motives. Is he sincere in regretting that the RSPB has shot foxes on its reserves? Choosing between Ian Botham and the RSPB on conservation matters is not a choice I'd like to make. I would have thought some experience of ducks was about the limit of his understanding of conservation.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2805710/RSPB-spends-quarter-cash-saving-birds-Sir-Ian-Botham-leads-landowners-blast-charity.html
http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/the-vampire-squid-rspb-attacked-by-other-conservationists-for-misusing-funds-9814685.html
Much of what he's said I've said myself, sometimes here on this blog. But I'm suspicious of his motives. Is he sincere in regretting that the RSPB has shot foxes on its reserves? Choosing between Ian Botham and the RSPB on conservation matters is not a choice I'd like to make. I would have thought some experience of ducks was about the limit of his understanding of conservation.
But the RSPB, like the
Wildlife Trusts, has not helped its cause. It's opened itself up to
the criticism by adopting practices more suitable to a multinational
outfit bent on empire building and self promotion than to a charity
promoting simple aims. Its bureaucracy has become too detached from
its membership. It is a behemoth and like all such is prone to want
to control all in sight, in their case not just the birds, their
habitats and their predators but the whole debate about wildlife and
landscape. Its size is its main problem. Size leads to centralised
decision making, a reliance on self promotion through a regular diet
of press releases and domination of the media.
Nevertheless you can
usually see where the RSPB is coming from most of the time which
can't be said for the devious media manipulators on the other side. And there
is another side, one which now seems to have enrolled Botham. And
that other side is at least as well resourced and partisan comprising
the Countryside Alliance, Field magazine and the numerous
'country-sports' semi-aristocratic and poseur hangers on of the
shooting lobby. These people like to think of themselves as the
inheritors of a tradition whose heyday was 19th century
England when it was the expected thing for well-to-do and leisured
gentlemen to spend their time either gambling or shooting while the
lower classes made them wealthy by working long hours in the mills
and mines of northern England.
What seems to have
sparked off the present fight back by those for whom wildlife is there to shoot is the
campaign the RSPB has finally got round to waging against the killing of
birds of prey by gamekeepers employed by wealthy shooting estates. I
sensed a reluctance to do this among the RSPB establishment, aware
that the 'R' in their charter comes with terms and conditions. They
are supposed to take no position on the shooting of game birds. But
that's not seen by many grass roots members as excluding them from
campaigning against the shooting and poisoning of predators; the same predators which sometimes
feed their families on these game birds under the mistaken impression that humans don't have a monopoly.
No comments:
Post a Comment