Pakistan Today

2,100 Endangered Birds killed by Saudi prince in Pakistan

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Balochistan forestry department officials say they have urged their superiors to stop allowing Saudi hunting parties in future.

A Saudi prince with a taste for the traditional sport of falconry illegally hunted 2,100 endangered birds while on holiday in Pakistan, officials said Wednesday.

Wildlife officials in Balochistan province have alleged that Prince Fahd bin Sultan and others in his party used specially trained falcons to kill the internationally protected houbara bustards while on a three-week trip in January.

Jaffar Baloch, divisional forest officer in Chagai district of Balochistan, said he had passed the details to his “superiors.”

Another senior official in the Balochistan forestry department confirmed the illegal hunting. “We requested our superiors to stop this practice in future, these birds are already endangered,” said the official, asking for anonymity.

For more than 1,000 years Bedouin falconers hunted the houbara bustard as a vital source of meat, according to experts.

Hunting houbara bustards is banned in Pakistan but authorities issue special permits to wealthy visitors from Arab countries. Permit holders can hunt up to 100 of the protected birds in 10 days, but only in certain areas.

The prince had the permit, the official said, but added: “The prince hunted down 1,977 birds himself and 123 were hunted by people travelling with him.”

Arab sheikhs are notoriously enthusiastic hunters, travelling to Pakistan each year to hunt the bird using the traditional Arabian method, arriving by private jets from the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.

Their wildly extravagant parties are allotted private hunting grounds in Sindh, Balochistan and Punjab provinces by the Pakistani government.

Provincial home secretary Asad Gilani said that it was the job of wildlife authorities to stop illegal hunting. According to conservative estimates, between 500,000 and a million birds migrate through Pakistan each year flying south from Siberia to pass the winter in central and south Asia.

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