The Australian government has announced AUS$19 million (£9.5 million) in funding for a mass cull of the country’s wild camels, most likely done by chasing and shooting the beasts from helicopters. The announcement has caused a stir, with people objecting to the waste of leaving shot camels to rot in the outback and others calling it inhumane (The Guardian).

Camels were introduced to Australia in the 19th century to help transport heavy goods to the remote interior of the country, but since being released into the wild they have since become a major pest (New Zealand Herald).
“The scientific evidence suggests they’ll eat anything up to 80 per cent of the plants available," Murray McGregor, research general manager of Desert Knowledge Cooperative Research Centre, which is involved in planning the cull, told the Sydney Morning Herald.
Jan Ferguson, managing director of the Desert Knowledge Cooperative Research Centre, says there are more than a million camels in desert regions. “Australia has long accepted that we’ve got a problem with rabbits,” she says, “because they are in everybody’s country. Camels tend to be isolated in the bush, so they’re not so visible.” The population is doubling in size every nine years.
But camel exporter Paddy McHugh might have a point when he says, “What happens in 15 years when the numbers come back again? Do we waste another AUS$20 million?” He suggests catching and exporting the animals for entertainment and food. Animal Liberation New South Wales animal welfare group instead proposed providing the camels with birth control
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd also got it in the neck from Erin Burnett, a newsreader on CNBC. She said during a broadcast: "There is a serial killer in Australia and we are going to put a picture up so we can see who it is.” A photo of Rudd appeared on the screen. “That would be the Prime Minister of Australia, Kevin Rudd,” Burnett told viewers. “Okay, well do you know what he is doing? He has launched air strikes – air strikes – against camels in the outback.” Burnett later called her announcement a “deadpan joke”.
Posted for Mico Tatalovic
Image: Wikimedia Commons