Plan to
clean up Italian capital condemned as barbaric by animal rights campaigners
Angela
Giuffrida in Rome
Fri 23
Nov 2018 12.09 GMTLast modified on Fri 23 Nov
2018 12.32 GMT
Authorities
in Rome have enlisted falcons to scare off defecating starlings, as the Italian capital
plays host to a growing menagerie of animals, including gulls, wild boars and
sheep.
Starlings
pass through the city in late autumn as they migrate to warmer climes for
winter, soiling its cobblestones and riverbanks with sticky guano and bothering
residents and tourists, who often use umbrellas to avoid the droppings.
Part of
the road that runs along the Tiber River was closed earlier this week because
the birds had left so much excrement, prompting authorities to call on a team
of falconers. It is unclear when the birds of prey will take to the skies, but
their job will be to frighten the starlings away from their nesting spots, such
as the trees along the streets.
The Rome
department in charge of environmental sustainability said the measure
constituted a “cruelty-free, ecological and natural solution” to the starling
problem.
Animal
rights activists condemned the initiative as “barbaric”. “The environmental
sustainability council says that using hawks to fight starlings is
‘cruelty-free, ecological and natural’ – these are shameful words that justify
what is a cruel and anachronistic method,” said Rinaldo Sidoli, a communication
manager for Animalisti Italiani.
He added
that the deterrent violated a municipal rule which prohibits the “release into
the environment of birds, except those treated by authorised wild animal
recovery centres”.
An
initiative involving falcons in 2015 also drew criticism. Previous city
authorities experimented with playing recordings of starling distress calls in
an attempt to get the birds, who tend to descend on the city at dusk, to flee.
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