Pa naravno, poklonila joj Lajava krzno od nekog jadnog jaguara kog su vezali da ga ona odstreli, za nagradu što je bespogovorno izvršavala naređenja, a i da motiviše Mstija, “komšu”, Frcija, Openboxa, Bregamija i Co da malo više propagiraju EU.
Pazi čime se luda fon der Lajenovka bavi, a neko joj se ovde klanjaju i zahtevaju da i ostali kleče dok ona i Borelj drže govorancije: nešto se desilo njenom poniju, i Lajava naredi da se nekom vuku, kog je ona lično, bez dokaza, proglasila za krivca, oduzme status zaštićene životinje, i sad po Lajenovkinom naređenju policija po Nemačkoj juri tog vuka da ga odstrele, za opomenu ostalim životinjama. Ko li će od njenih podanika da dobije krzno?
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The German region of Hannover has issued an official shooting permit for a wolf that killed one of the ponies of European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, who said earlier that the EU executive will reevaluate wolves’ protected status.
The pony, named ‘Dolly’, had been killed by a wolf attack in early September when it was grazing together with another pony owned by the von der Leyen family near Hannover, in Northern Germany.
“The whole family is extremely perturbed by the news,” the Commission president’s spokesperson said at the time.
Now, the competent authorities have allowed the wolf in question to be eliminated.
“An exemption from conservation legislation has been requested and was considered in accordance with the legal requirements. These have been met,” a spokesperson of the relevant municipal administration, told the German daily
TAZ on Friday (9 December).
The wolf is a so-called ‘problem wolf’ – a concept in Germany’s conservation legislation that applies when a wolf repeatedly attacks livestock or otherwise demonstrates it is not fit for friendly coexistence with human life and that makes it easier to obtain an exceptional shooting permit.
According to the spokesperson, the animal has killed a total of 12 sheep and cows, apart from the pony. However, she did not want to comment on whether ‘Dolly’s’ death specifically was what finally prompted the decision to issue a shooting permit.
Commission taking new look at data on wolf protection status
After experts on site had already concluded the pony was likely killed by a wolf shortly after the incident, the results of a DNA analysis published on Wednesday (7 December) confirmed this and helped identify the specific wolf.
Meanwhile, von der Leyen said in a letter to German conservative (EPP) lawmakers last week that she had instructed Commission services to “carry out an in-depth analysis” on the wolf’s endangered status after the party had called to loosen conservation rules.
She also invited MEPs to submit any further evidence at their disposal that would indicate that “the wolf species is no longer endangered in Europe.”
While she did not mention her pony in the letter, which was seen by EURACTIV, she said the Commission “acknowledges that the return of wolves to regions of the Union in which they have been absent for a long time and their growing populations in new territories lead to challenges and certain conflicts, such as attacks on livestock and risks for the local population.”
A controversial question
Wolves and other large carnivores are currently under strict protection according to the EU habitats directive, which means that all forms of deliberate capture or killing of wolves in the wild are prohibited.
However, farmers and representatives of countries and regions with big carnivore populations have warned that growing populations pose a threat to farming and local communities.
Lawmakers from the EPP, which von der Leyen is herself part of, have been vocal in calling to reconsider the protected status of wolves and other large carnivores such as bears or lynxes, most recently through a controversial Red Riding Hood-themed Twitter campaign.