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New Zealand passed a law Tuesday recognizing animals as “sentient beings.” The Animal Welfare Amendment Bill updated the country’s Animal Welfare Act of 1999 by acknowledging animals have emotions and can experience pain and distress, and as such cannot be willfully or recklessly ill-treated. Animal owners are required to provide for the welfare of their pets or livestock; those who fail to comply will be subject to various penalty levels, with animal welfare inspectors issuing compliance notices.While the bill does indeed have far-reaching consequences, a rumored ban on hunting is not one of them. Yet.
But the bill’s passage begs the question: If New Zealand has went so far toward recognizing animals as sentient beings, how long will it allow hunting to take place? That remains to be seen, but savvy hunters would do well to take their trips to the country soon.
I'd be shocked if they did anything to restrict hunting down there. Not a gun friendly place, but hunting is culturally important and ecologically important there. They really struggle to keep the animals in check down there to prevent erosion, damage to native plants and animals, etc.I think they still do both helicopter and chemical culls on the deer and tahr.