The Malta Independent 2 July 2025, Wednesday
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The hunting saga continues: Hunters to contest spring hunting referendum in court today

Jacob Borg Thursday, 2 October 2014, 08:06 Last update: about 12 years ago

The hunters' federation (FKNK) will today contest the right for a referendum to be held on the abolition of spring hunting, FKNK President Lino Farrugia told The Malta Independent.

The Electoral Commission has verified the signatures collected by the anti-spring hunting coalition and passed on the petition to the Constitutional Court.
The Constitutional Court can officially request a referendum once the three-month period in which objections can be filed is over. The referendum would have been held in March 2015, but this eleventh hour protest may yet push that date back, allowing for another season of spring hunting to take place.

The country's three independent newspapers are joining forces by adopting a single, unified stance against the practice of spring hunting and in favour of the upcoming referendum seeking to put an end to the ecologically unsustainable practice in Malta once and for all.

On Sunday, The Malta Independent on SundayThe Sunday Times of Malta and MaltaToday all announced an unprecedented step of adopting a joint stance in favour of next spring's referendum.

The three media houses will be leveraging their collective pressure to urge the government to ensure that the referendum on the spring hunting season will be held next spring as projected, and in the full spirit of democracy after 41,500 members of the electorate signed a petition for the holding of a referendum to abolish spring hunting circulated by the Coalition Against Spring Hunting.

The three media houses will also be urging the electorate to participate actively in the vote when the day comes.

Not up to PM to decide if referendum will go ahead- Muscat

Prime Minister Joseph Muscat yesterday said it is up to the court to decide whether the referendum on the abolition of spring hunting will go ahead, when asked to give a guarantee that the referendum will be held next year.

"That is not something that the Prime Minister decides. This is something that is in our Constitution, now it is up to the court, and it is the court that decides, I am not the one who decides these things," Dr Muscat said. 

 

 

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