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The Documentary Podcast

Dying to hunt in France

The Documentary Podcast

BBC

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.32.7K Ratings

🗓️ 7 April 2022

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Just before Christmas, 2021, Joel Vilard was driving his cousin home on a dual carriageway just south of Rennes in Brittany. Suddenly, a bullet flew through the window and hit the pensioner in the neck. He later died in hospital of injuries accidentally inflicted by a hunter firing a rifle from a few hundred metres away. A year earlier Morgan Keane, was shot dead in his garden, while out chopping wood. The hunter says that he mistook the 25 year old man for a wild boar.

Mila Sanchez was so shocked by her friend Morgan’s death that she collected hundreds of thousands of signatures to change the hunting laws. She gave evidence to the French Senate and put the topic on the political agenda. The Green Party is now calling for a ban on hunting on Sundays and Wednesdays. But the Federation National des Chasseurs, which licenses the 1.3 million active hunters across France, is fighting back. It argues hunting is a vital part of rural life and brings the community together. Its members were delighted when President Macron recently halved the cost of annual hunting permits.

Yet public opinion, concerned about safety and animal rights, is hardening against hunting and the battle for la France Profonde is on. On the eve of presidential elections, Lucy Ash looks at a country riven with divisions and asks if new laws are needed to ensure ramblers, families, residents and hunters can share the countryside in harmony.

Presenter: Lucy Ash Producer: Phoebe Keane Editor: Bridget Harney

(Image: Anthony, from the Ile de France branch of the Federations of Hunters, in the forest of Rambouillet west of Paris. Credit: Amélie Le Meur)

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello and welcome to assignment on the BBC World Service.

0:11.0

I'm tiptoeing through Birch and Chestnut trees in the forest of Rambuye outside Paris.

0:18.0

We have to walk, we have to walk slowly and we have to observe the animals.

0:23.0

How do we make it? It's not easy.

0:28.0

It's quite difficult, Stefan is saying you don't want to run, you don't want to go too fast,

0:33.0

but you also don't want to go too slowly. You have to just observe the animals very carefully and see.

0:38.0

Right now, just for how they're going to move, what they're going to do next.

0:46.0

There's a doe that's just one possible. Oh my god.

0:50.0

A doe has just gone right past us and she's trying desperately to jump over the fence,

0:54.0

but she can't make it, she keeps on bashing her head. I know she's actually finally got over the top.

1:00.0

Must have met him quite relieved.

1:03.0

I may not be a natural born deer killer, but for many in rural areas in what's known as La France profonde,

1:10.0

hunting is an essential part of life. There are one and a half million active hunters,

1:17.0

four million people who have a hunting license,

1:20.0

and it's the country's third most popular pastime after football and rugby.

1:25.0

Tari Clèque, who represents 22,000 hunters in the Paris region, says it's his passion

1:31.0

and something he can share with his friends.

1:34.0

After the hunting day, in the evening, till late in the night, we stay together,

1:41.0

talking about what nature came and shooting and hunting.

1:46.0

It's a culture. It's a culture. If you stop hunting or shooting in France, it could be a revolution.

1:53.0

Really? A revolution?

1:55.0

Yes, tell you.

...

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