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Protesters gather to prevent Australian kangaroo slaughter

CANBERRA: Protesters gathered at an abandoned military site here on Saturday to prevent the planned slaughter of 400 kangaroos blamed for ruining the habitat of rare lizards and insects.

About 70 protesters congregated at the gate of the disused naval communications station in suburban Canberra, vowing to stop government contractors from entering and killing the eastern gray kangaroos.

The planned cull has triggered international protests by animal rights activists and split Australians over the merits of killing their beloved national symbol to protect rare lizards and insects that share their grassy habitat.

Citing possible danger to the public, the Defence Department does not plan to shoot the animals. The contractors will instead fire darts to tranquillise them before administering lethal injections.

“We are all determined to see that the kangaroos are not killed,” said protest leader Pat O’Brien, president of the Wildlife Protection Association of Australia, whose patrons are the family of the late ‘Crocodile Hunter’ Steve Irwin.

“There is a lot of anger in a lot of people about this. We will stand in between the kangaroo and the darts if necessary,” he said.

The Defence Department declined to say when the cull would start, but Mr. O’Brien said he has heard rumours that it would begin in the coming days.

The plan is a scaled-down version of a proposal last year to eradicate about half of the more than 6,000 kangaroos at two military sites in Canberra. Scientists point out that eastern gray kangaroos are abundant and they are destroying the native grassland of threatened species such as the grassland earless dragon, striped legless lizard, golden sun moth and perunga grasshopper.

European settlers built Australia’s cattle and sheep industries on grass seeds imported from Britain and native grassland, which is imperative for some species, is now rare. In some parts of Australia, it can only be found in old cemeteries where livestock never grazed. — AP

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