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New York Post
Feral cat-killing competition that awards cash prizes to kids leaves nearly 400 animals dead
By Isabel Keane,
10 hours ago
A controversial competition allowing New Zealand children to hunt feral cats for cash prizes has produced its largest haul to date, with nearly 400 cats killed during this year’s highly protested event.
The annual hunt, open to children and adult participants, mainly targets New Zealand’s large feral cat population though participants can also hunt deer, pigs, ducks, possums and rabbits.
While the event is met with swift backlash each year, event organizer Matt Bailey defended the tradition, calling the country’s feral cat population “possessed by the devil.”
“Out here in the country, we do things a bit differently,” Bailey said on Tuesday after the event, adding that the publicity generated by protesters has “been the best thing that has happened to the competition”.
Feral and domestic cats are a serious threat to New Zealand’s biodiversity and wildlife as they prey on their native birds, lizards, bats and insects.
This year’s competition raised a bout$60,000 for a local school and community pool, and venison from the deer hunt has been processed and frozen to donate to food banks, according to The Guardian.
The event originally began as a local wild pig hunting competition but eventually began to include cats as farmers noticed their growing numbers.
There were safeguards to ensure none of the cats involved were domesticated pets. The cats were caught in box traps and a .22 calibre rifle was later used to kill captured animals.
According to Bailey, new laws are needed to stop people from ditching their unwanted cats in the countryside.
“They just turn up on the side of the road, so people coming out of Christchurch are just discarding these animals, thinking they’re doing the right thing because they don’t have the money to put them down,” he said.
Meanwhile protesters and opposing groups like the Animal Justice Party say alternative methods to managing the growing cat populations should be considered, including trap-to-neuter programs.
“If we genuinely care about bird conservation and wildlife protection, we need individuals to take responsibility for their cats by neutering to prevent unplanned breeding and the subsequent dumping of unwanted litters,” it said.
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