Petition handover: A Ban on the Manufacture, Sale and Use of Snares in Wales

Published 21/09/2016   |   Last Updated 21/09/2016

The National Assembly’s Petitions Committee has received a petition calling for snare traps to be banned.

The petition states:

We call on the National Assembly for Wales to urge the Welsh Government to ban the manufacture, sale and use of snares in Wales.

“Snares are thin wire nooses designed to trap ‘predator’ species. The nature of their design means that – despite supposedly being used as a restraining device – they cause severe injuries to those animals they catch. These injuries include limb amputation, strangulation and often death.

“According to Defra, up to two thirds of those animals caught are not even the target species. Most frequently snares are set to catch foxes, but in reality, they catch badgers, deer and domestic pets. In Wales, some 370,000 animals are snared every year. That’s more than 1,000 a day.

“In 2015, the Welsh Government introduced a Code of Best Practice on the use of snares, but compliance with the Code is voluntary and there are no checks in place or penalties for those who do not comply. Even a Code-compliant snare is a crude, indiscriminate device, more likely to cause injury or death than to restrain an animal.

“The Welsh Assembly has the power to end this practice and lead the way for animal welfare in the UK by banning the manufacture, sale and use of snares in Wales.”

The petition, which has gathered 1400 signatures, was presented to the Chair of the Petitions Committee, Mike Hedges AM.