Mary Anne Weaver covering houbara hunting for The New Yorker wrote: “As we waited on the tarmac, the arriving planes lit up the night sky. Flying in formation, observing protocol-apparently-an executive Learjet was followed by two customised Boeings and a fleet of reconfigured C-130s, which flew two abreast. They had all been designated ‘special VVIP flights’ by the Pakistani government. The lead planes touched down and a red carpet was hastily unrolled. As we approached the entourage, an Arab diplomat said with exhaustion in his voice ‘this is the sixth flight in one week’.” Weaver went on: “A local chieftain later told me, ‘You know, madam, these Arabs consider houbara an aphrodisiac.’ So I have heard, I replied. ‘But some of them, madam, eat one houbara a day, sometimes two if it’s a special occasion. That means they may eat as many as 500 birds a year!” Poor bird.
A few weeks ago, the houbara hunting camp of Qatar’s petroleum minister in Kech was vandalised and set on fire. Luckily, the minister hadn’t arrived from Qatar at the time. Incidentally, the minister’s hunting entourage had been attacked last year, too. The houbara must possess some rare quality for its hunters to pursue it so relentlessly.
The government, during 2012-13, issued 12 permits for hunting with about 815 trained falcons. Two of these permits for 135 falcons were presented to the Saudi royal family, five for 200 falcons to the royal family of Bahrain, two permits for 250 falcons to the UAE, and three for 230 falcons to the royal families of Qatar.
Although a rapidly increasing population and use of pesticides are also partly responsible, but indiscriminate hunting, poaching and netting even during the mating season are the main reasons why our wildlife is being destroyed. Strange it is that politically influential hunters and bird shooters are usually appointed game wardens. The irony is that while the houbara is becoming extinct, the royals chasing it are multiplying. Too many royals, too few birds.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 1st, 2014.
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Musharraf is on record for declaring proudly that he has caught and exported Pakistanis to America for as low as $1k.so allowing foreigners to kill one's wild life doesn't seem so outlandish.while on one hand Pakistani authorities are crying hoarse about the ill effects of Indian military detachment in Siachin, on Environment,while this cruel blow on ecological balance doesn't seem to bother them in any way.I am shocked to know that there is a country in the world which issues permits to kill an endangered species of birds.that simply seems to be devoid of any logic.only a sham democracy with absolutely no sense of self respect can go ahead with such an act.but then again,Pakistan has always looked at the deserts of Arabia for inspiration....
When Pakistan can sell its people for a few dollars is it a surprise that the poor birds are being allowed to be hunted to please the arab masters and get some money?
Is it any surprise that Pakistan is reputed to be a country which relishes swimming against the current?
What's this bird called in Urdu?
Hunting is a great sport for the military officers; one would have thought that with the civiilian Government Pakistan forestry department will cut down this madness! here is no point in blaming the arabs, who given the opportunity will turn the entire landscape into a desert.
Rex Minor