Thirty-one police forces join farmers in stamping out hare coursing

Farmers face threatening behaviour, violence and intimidation when people use their land to practice hare coursing
Farmers face threatening behaviour, violence and intimidation when people use their land to practice hare coursing

Efforts have been ramped up to rid the countryside of hare coursing, as thirty-one police forces join farmers in stamping the practice out.

Thirty-one police forces, representing over 90% of forces facing issues with hare coursing in England and Wales, and the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) have joined the NFU to highlight the illegal activity.

Hare coursing has increased steadily in recent years. Cambridgeshire, one of the worst counties affected, reported nearly a 40 per cent rise in reported incidents from 1184 cases in 2016 to 1634 in 2017.

And more than 300 incidents of hare coursing has been recorded in the space of one month in Lincolnshire, severely impacting local farmers and their livelihoods.

In a meeting on Tuesday (19 December), the NFU stressed the need for a dedicated rural police team in each force to better tackle rural crime.

It also called for the Government to form a cross-departmental rural crime task force to address the failures in dealing with rural crime.

More consistent policing and sentencing can avoid ‘criminal tourism’ where perpetrators often travel considerable distances to target rural businesses.

Intimidation

Representatives from the police and CPS were told how hare coursing, which some police forces have linked to organised crime, sees farmers facing threatening behaviour, violence and intimidation.

The NFU has found that this threatening behaviour has led to a culture of underreporting to police, meaning the true scale of hare coursing in rural areas may not be known.

NFU Deputy President Minette Batters said: “The NFU is hearing from farmers that there have been dramatic increases in all rural crime, but hare coursing in particular is causing incredible cost and damage to farm businesses.

“In our recent Rural Crime Report, we laid out how important a joined up approach is from all aspects of the Government, police and justice system to tackle these issues.

“Six months on, this remains the case. It is critical for farm businesses that there is consistency in both policing and sentencing and the NFU will continue to push for this as the path forward.

“There needs to be robust action against hare coursers to end this blight on our countryside and ensure that farmers do not continue to be targeted by criminals.”