Austrian Prince Accused Of Illegally Killing Bear Named Arthur In Romania

Prince Emanuel von und zu Liechtenstein got a permit to hunt a "problematic" bear, but allegedly killed Arthur instead.
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BUCHAREST (AP) — Romanian police will investigate a possible poaching case involving an Austrian prince who is reported to have “wrongly” killed a massive male bear in a trophy hunt on a visit to the country’s Carpathian Mountains in March, authorities said Wednesday.

Official hunting documents seen by The Associated Press confirms that Prince Emanuel von und zu Liechtenstein was granted a four-day hunting permit in March in Romania’s Covasna County and that on March 13 he “harvested” a 17-year-old brown bear, for which he allegedly paid the princely sum of 7,000 euros ($8,400).

A senior official from Romania’s environmental ministry, Octavian Berceanu, told the AP that an investigation into the case was launched on April 29 and that poaching is the one of the suspicions in the case.

“All of the papers from National Environmental Guard will go to the police,” he said, referring to a branch of the ministry.

Berceanu also said that some official papers that are required after a bear kill are missing.

“The local environment agency should inform the Environmental Guard after the shooting, but this didn’t happen,” Berceanu said.

Repeated attempts to contact the prince’s estate were unsuccessful. Switzerland’s Blick newspaper quoted the prince as saying he wouldn’t comment on the matter.

Agent Green, an environmental nongovernmental organization that monitored the large male bear they called “Arthur” for nine years, says that it lived “deep in the wild” and had no contact with human settlements.

In this Oct. 2019 handout photo provided by NGO Agent Green, Arthur, a 17 year-old bear, is seen in the Covasna county, Romania. (Agent Green via AP)
In this Oct. 2019 handout photo provided by NGO Agent Green, Arthur, a 17 year-old bear, is seen in the Covasna county, Romania. (Agent Green via AP)
Agent Green via AP

Romania officially banned trophy hunting in 2016, but hunting permits for “problematic” bears — ones that damage things such as farm crops or domestic animals — can be issued to hunting associations but only as a last resort, after relocation measures fail. These permits are then sold to trophy hunters.

But Agent Green claims that the environment authorities issued the hunting permit based on a complaint about a “problematic” cub-rearing female bear that had caused damage in the village of Ojdula in Transylvania last summer.

“It was always about shooting the biggest bear and not about solving the problem of the community,” Gabriel Paun, president of Agent Green, told the AP. “I wonder how the prince mistook the biggest male living deep in the wild against the much smaller female next to the village.”

Due to Arthur the brown bear’s large size, it was considered in hunting parlance a “Golden” trophy, prized specimens which can fetch upward of 20,000 euros (nearly $25,000).

“Every farmer I spoke to in the village of Ojdula said that nothing had changed since the male bear was shot and that the female bear continues to come daily to the households. This is poaching as the prince shot the wrong bear — it was murder,” Paun said.

Environment Minister Barna Tanczos told local media on Wednesday that determining whether the correct bear was killed was “extremely complicated.”

A petition launched yesterday by Agent Green calling for a total trophy hunting ban in Romania has garnered more than 13,000 signatures.

For brown bear expert Csaba Domokos of the nature conservation NGO Milvus Group, the killing of Arthur “is nothing exceptional.” He also said that for many hunters, killing a female with cubs would go against hunting “ethics.”

“The hunting associations use damages as a pretext to shoot the trophy bears. The exceptions are the cases when they use it to shoot a problematic bear,” Domokos told The Associated Press.

“They just get someone from a village to give some evidence that there was a bear causing problems … then a (hunting permit) is given out and they just go and shoot a big bear because they get more money than shooting a smaller one,” he said.

Romania is home to Europe’s biggest population of brown bears, officially around 6,000. But some scientists dispute these figures claiming that the methodology behind the count was inadequate.

The killing of the large carnivore took place in a protected Natura 2000 Site, areas of special natural interest and home to some of Europe’s most valuable and threatened species, protected under EU law.

“The current law is poor, there are too many gray areas and it’s facilitating trophy hunters to come to Romania,” Paun said.

“At the moment anyone can make a fake complaint about a bear and send it to a hunting association who will do all the necessary work to obtain a hunting permit — then a hunter comes and shoots any bear they wish.”

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