Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. researcher calls for wild horse protections

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Mar, 2023 03:41 PM
  • B.C. researcher calls for wild horse protections

KAMLOOPS, B.C. - A biologist and wild horse researcher is calling for stronger federal and provincial protections for the animals after 17 carcasses were found in rural British Columbia.

Wayne McCrory, who has been studying horses in the province for about two decades, said he was shocked to learn the animals had been shot to death.

Wild horses are an important part of Canadian heritage, First Nation culture and the ecosystem, and need legislation to protect them, he said in an interview on Wednesday.

"It's time to ramp up protection, both federal and provincial, in my opinion, to stop this senseless slaughter when some trigger-happy person just decides to take the law into his own hands," McCrory said. "In Canada, whether it's a species at risk, wild horses or old-growth (trees), it just takes a lot of political will on the Canadian public to see that happen."

RCMP Cpl. Cory Lepine, who is the sole such livestock investigator in the province, said in an interview that he believes the bodies of the horses had been there for about two weeks, based on how heavily scavenged the bodies were by the time officers arrived.

The animals were found about 65 kilometres west of Kamloops, near Walhachin, B.C., on Friday.

Lepine said they were located various distances apart in two groups, one with six and the other with 11. He said the motive has not yet been confirmed.

"This is pretty senseless, as far as I'm concerned," he said Wednesday. "I don't see a real reason for it."

He said he is not yet sure what charges the individual would face if caught, but animal cruelty would likely be the main allegation.

The Mounties are asking anyone with information to come forward.

The RCMP said in a news release Tuesday that the horses were found on Crown land, noting the horses are of cultural significance to the local Skeetchestn Band.

"The Skeetchestn range is adjacent to this Crown range (where the animals were found) and I think the horses kind of go back and forth, so the community is used to having them there," Lepine said.

He noted the herd of wild horses is "well known" in the area and is estimated to include a total of about 250 animals.

The Skeetchestn Band did not immediately return requests for comment.

MORE National ARTICLES

Will the Bank of Canada raise its key interest rate again?

Will the Bank of Canada raise its key interest rate again?
Since last March, the central bank has raised its key rate from near-zero to 4.5 per cent, the highest it's been since 2007. The central bank's next rate decision is set for Wednesday.

Will the Bank of Canada raise its key interest rate again?

Trudeau 'surprised' by B.C. firm's cocaine licence

Trudeau 'surprised' by B.C. firm's cocaine licence
Trudeau said Friday that the federal government was "working very quickly" with Adastra Labs of Langley, B.C., "to correct the misunderstanding" caused by the company's statement saying it was looking at commercializing cocaine as part of its business model.

Trudeau 'surprised' by B.C. firm's cocaine licence

Three B.C. avalanche victims from Germany

Three B.C. avalanche victims from Germany
Mayor Walter Bauer told the news agency that the other man was from Munich. RCMP say nine foreign visitors and their Canadian guide were engulfed by the avalanche Wednesday.

Three B.C. avalanche victims from Germany

Eby says failure of laundering laws 'shocking'

Eby says failure of laundering laws 'shocking'
Eby told a news conference on Thursday about funding for overdose prevention and mental health that, "if Health Canada did in fact do this," the federal agency did so without engaging the B.C. government or notifying the province. 

Eby says failure of laundering laws 'shocking'

B.C. to ask Ottawa to change money laundering law

B.C. to ask Ottawa to change money laundering law
Niki Sharma says B.C. will ask for changes to the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act to bring Canadian law into harmony with the United States and United Kingdom.    

B.C. to ask Ottawa to change money laundering law

B.C. firm gets Health Canada's OK to sell cocaine

B.C. firm gets Health Canada's OK to sell cocaine
Adastra CEO Michael Forbes says it will evaluate how the commercialization of the substance fits in with its business model in an effort to position itself to support the demand for a safe supply of cocaine.    

B.C. firm gets Health Canada's OK to sell cocaine