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Wolf in Saxony to be shot

January 19, 2017

For the first time, the German state of Saxony is allowing a wild wolf to be shot, for displaying "unusual behavior." The decision is a rare one, as wolves are strictly protected in Germany.

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Wolf Deutschland Wildpark Schorfheide
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/P.Pleul

A two-year-old male wolf in the eastern German state of Saxony is to be shot after being regularly seen looking for food near human habitations, the Environment Ministry in Dresden said on Thursday.

The ministry said the wolf, which has been given the number MT6 and is living in the region of Görlitz, had not kept the typical distance from humans and had even approached them.

"Because of the wolf's unusual behavior, there is the danger of further escalation. The safety of humans takes priority over species protection," the ministry said. It has given exceptional permission for the wolf to be shot by a specially commissioned hunter.

Wolves are strictly protected in Germany, and an individual animal may be killed only when it represents a threat to humans or is expected to cause financial damage.

Two wounded wolves have been put to sleep in Saxony, but no wolf has so far been shot there.

According to the information center "Wolves in Saxony," the state currently has 15 packs of wolves, three mating pairs and one individual animal living there. Germany as a whole had 46 packs, 15 mating pairs and 4 individual animals as of 2015/2016, meaning that some 120 to 130 adult wolves are living in the wild in the country.

The wolf that is to be shot has been identified as coming from a pack in Poland, which borders on Saxony.

Calls for regulation

Several attacks by wolves on sheep and wild animals have recently led to proposals for a limited cull, with Federal Agriculture Minister Christian Schmidt of the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU) saying that the population had grown enough to demand regulation.

The suggestion met with strong criticism from the conservation organization WWF Deutschland, which called Schmidt's idea "nonsense" and said he was "pandering to his clientele."

The WWF's director of nature protection, Christoph Heinrich, told the newspaper "Passauer Neue Presse" that Schmidt should remain objective in "a sometimes hysterical debate," and called for livestock to be "simply better protected." He said current laws already allowed problematic animals to be shot if necessary.

Despite Germany's strict laws on protecting the animals, wolves are sometimes found shot or even decapitated, while others are killed by vehicles.

Not all European countries' laws are so protective of wolves and other wild animals, with Slovenia announcing on Thursday that it would allow hunters to kill 93 brown bears and up to 8 wolves this year in order to keep those animal populations from growing.

tj/rc (dpa, AFP, Reuters)