The Times: ‘Foreigners should not roam countryside as they please' !!!

After reading this, makes you wonder if Malta is really part of the EU!!! Makes you really wonder what time warp this island seems to be stuck in!:rolleyes: What a sorry state.  Guess next episode of Dr Who can be shot here :lol:http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/vi … se-.455734

‘Foreigners should not roam countryside as they please'
‘It's when they trespass – and they do this with a certain arrogance – that we have a problem,' says the president of the hunters' federation
Hunters yesterday called on the next government to prevent foreigners from roaming the countryside as they pleased.
Unbelievable and absurd
The curb on the movement of foreigners was one of 12 pre-election proposals published by the hunters' federation (FKNK) for the political parties to consider.
Contacted for clarification on this proposal, FKNK president Joe Perici Calascione said: “If they (foreigners) want to see birds, they can go to special places.”
Mr Perici Calascione suggested that foreigners could go bird-watching in Buskett, where the federation has ensured no illegal hunting takes place.
“A lot of tourists do not respect privacy. Here in Malta they are given the freedom to move about without sticking to footpaths.
“The countryside belongs to everyone, but there is a lot of the Maltese countryside that is privately owned or leased,” he said.
He suggested that the Malta Tourism Authority creates clear footpaths so that tourists do not wander into private fields.
The FKNK president blamed conservation NGO Birdlife for giving foreigners the wrong perception of Maltese hunters.
“Hunting in Malta is targeted as something bad. It's when they (foreigners) trespass – and they trespass with a certain arrogance – that we have a problem.”
Claims that much of the countryside is private property have been disputed by NGOs recently.
Last weekend Birdlife drew attention to what it described as the “illegal occupation of the countryside” and proliferation of “illegal signs and graffiti”.
In The Times yesterday, the Ramblers Association suggested that supposed landowners or lease-holders blocking access to the countryside should be forced to affix documentation on their gates proving their rights to the land.
Asked to respond to the proposal to restrict the movement of foreigners, Tourism Minister Mario de Marco said: “The Tourism Policy (2012-2016) includes proposals for strengthening this aspect of our country's tourism product and in recent years through projects such as the Malta Goes Rural, we have invested in improving areas of our countryside to make them more accessible and attractive to tourists.
“Public areas of our countryside are therefore an important element of our country's tourism product and are to remain accessible for the enjoyment of tourists and the general public.”
Alternattiva Demokratika yes­terday called the proposal “unbelievable” and “absurd”.
“Malta is a free country where public land belongs to everyone. Malta is also part of the European Union and therefore every Maltese and European has freedom of movement,” AD said.
PL environment spokesman Leo Brincat refused to comment.
“I think it's only fair that we react as a political party and not as individual,” he said.
Among its other proposals published yesterday, the FKNK called for an amnesty for stuffed birds along with a new system to stop abuse.
It proposed the reintroduction of trapping licences and a system to fund the FKNK through fees paid for hunting and trapping.
The federation said it was also seeking limited trapping of song birds in the autumn and the “correct application” of a spring hunting derogation according to the judgment of the European Court, with the removal of “unnecessary restrictions” not found in EU rules.
Similarly it called for the “correct application” of a derogation to allow turtle dove hunting in spring.
The federation said other restrictions not found in EU rules should also be removed, including the ban on hunting after 3pm in the second half of September and limitations on hunting from the seashore.
It also called for a fixed spring/winter hunting season.

From the President of the Hunters Association.  This story is drivel. Cant imagine why the Times would publish such nonsense. Its absurd on so many levels.

Wouldnt it be nice if the ramblers association tooled up with shotguns too. !  ;)

I fully agree what alot of crap to put it mildly.
As the article states, if the land is truly owned privately they should put a system in place to mark it as such.

Malta's economy relies heavily on the tourist trade and i've heard of  many storys where tourists have been intimidated by shot gun wielding agressive maltese hunters who insist that they are trespassing, when quite clearly they are not.

One couple told me about a walk they had taken from the cliffs above Bahrija back up to the town along the way a Maltese hunter started screaming at them that they were on his land and quite literally scared the hell out of them, coming over and trying forceably to move them, shotgun still in hand.
Anywhere else in Europe this would be a serious matter were as in Malta the hunters seem untouchable.
Now i do not know for sure if the land around Bahrija is private or public, however for something like this to happen either way is unacceptable.

Easy answer to this tighter laws on hunting or owning a shotgun and more restrictions that are enforced strictly as to where these "hunters" can shoot.

Malta is a jewel in the Med with so many opportunities to make this island a top destination for holiday makers either be it for the history the sun and the sea or flora and fauna.
Just wish that some of the Maltese would realise this so we could add wildlife to that list too.

As a member of the Maltese Ramblers I have to say that it is not unusual to be shot at when you walk in the Maltese countryside.

Being shot at means that you get hit by lead shot raining down and probably deliberatly delivered to scare off walkers from the many illegal trapping sites along the cliffs !

We as Ramblers are looking at legal signs to be put up on real 'private' property. With signatures from Lands Department to prove the rights !

We don't usually have problems as Maltese hunters are cowards and only bully single walkers as they know that they will have a big problem if the police are actually called in -))

But as recently shown in the media Maltese hunters even try to intimidate politicians . Do they think Malta should be run by hunters ? A few thousand hunters think themselves more important than the whole rest of the population ! Now they want to be allowed to shoot from the beaches in the middle of folks on the beach !

Cheers
Ricky