Campaigners calling for the government to set out a timetable for delivering stronger fox hunting laws have delivered a 104,000-signature petition to 10 Downing Street on what is the twentieth anniversary of the Hunting Act coming into force – 18 February:
Thank you to everyone who signed and shared the petition to end fox hunting! 🙌
We’ve exceeded our goal of 100,000 signatures and today, alongside our fellow Time for Change Coalition members, we are delivering it to Downing Street. #TimeForChange pic.twitter.com/DeaJozdPRj
— League Against Cruel Sports (@LeagueACS) February 18, 2025
The Hunting Act: still not fit for purpose, 20 years on
The League Against Cruel Sports, backed by a raft of celebrities and more than 30 organisations in the Time for Change Coalition Against Hunting, are asking for the law to be strengthened to prevent old fashioned illegal hunting with hounds to take place.
Today the charity is also releasing figures that include hundreds of incidents where hunts were seen chasing foxes or wreaking havoc on rural communities since last summer.
They show 298 foxes reported being pursued by hunts, 350 reports relating to suspected illegal hunting, and 885 cases of hunt havoc.
The League’s figures cover the cub hunting season from August to October, and the fox hunting season from November to early February in England and Wales.
Chris Luffingham, acting chief executive at the League Against Cruel Sports, said:
It’s now 20 years since the landmark Hunting Act came into force, a historic milestone in animal welfare that the League was at the forefront of driving, but has never been fit for its intended purpose.
Hunts claim that they are following trails but our figures show this is clearly a smokescreen to conceal the brutal pursuit and killing of foxes from the public, police and courts.
We welcome the government’s commitment to banning trail hunting but want it to go further by removing the loopholes in the Hunting Act and introducing custodial sentences for those caught breaking the law – we need a proper deterrent.
The time for change is now. It’s time for the government to listen to us and the more than 100,000 people who have signed this petition and set out a timetable for when it will end this abhorrent blood sport once and for all.
Hunts are still breaching the law and causing havoc
The reports of suspected illegal hunting include foxes being chased by hounds, but also other behaviour by hunts that point to the hunting of a wild animal rather than a pre-laid trail, such as terriers being used to flush out foxes that have fled underground.
Hunt havoc also includes incidents inconsistent with laying a trail – hounds running amok on roads and causing road traffic accidents; trespass on people’s properties including their private gardens, livestock worrying; attacks on pet cats or dogs; badger setts being damaged to prevent foxes escaping; and other wildlife such as deer being chased.
The figures are compiled and analysed by the League Against Cruel Sports’ intelligence team, which includes former police officers and civilian analysts.
Chris Luffingham added:
These figures are just the tip of the iceberg in respect to the killing still taking place in the countryside, with many incidents in isolated areas undoubtedly going unrecorded, but they give us an invaluable insight into the continued behaviour of the hunts.
Celebrities who have publicly backed the League’s campaign over the Hunting Act include actors Maxine Peake, Evanna Lynch, Mike Beckingham, and Wendy Morgan; naturalist and wildlife TV presenter Chris Packham:
“It’s a device that was invented by the hunting fraternity so that they could perpetuate illegal activity.” – @ChrisGPackham
Trail hunting is a lie and it's #TimeForChange.
Sign our petition 👉 https://t.co/dilFVafuyZ#EndHunting pic.twitter.com/IqxHC0Snjo
— League Against Cruel Sports (@LeagueACS) February 13, 2025
Others include Hannah Stitfall and Iolo Williams, and GP, TV personality, and author Dr Amir Khan. It has also been shared by actor Dan Richardson and TV presenters Kirsty Gallagher and Kate Lawler.
Featured image via the Canary