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Thursday, January 11, 2018

Hunting hounds tear through cat sanctuary, leaving dozens of rescue animals 'traumatised' and missing

'It's absolutely outrageous – I'm so angry, I'm so upset, we bring these cats down to what's supposed to be a sanctuary, where they're supposed to be safe'



A whole pack of hunting hounds in pursuit of both a fox and deer thundered through an animal sanctuary, displacing more than 60 terrified animals during their evening feed.
The pack of hounds tore through the Celia Hammond Animal Trust, which provides shelter for 130 rescued animals, many of which are unwell and or in the later years of life and difficult to rehome.

The shelter mainly cares for cats, 60 of which fled the chaotic scene as volunteers and police both battled to chase the pack of hounds away from the cats on Monday.

Celia Hammond with rescue cats at her 100-acre sanctuary in East Sussex (Harry Cockburn) SOURCE THE independent  


The charity sanctuary in Hastings, Sussex, is still missing many of its animals that are believed to have fled into nearby woods to escape the hunt.
Volunteers described a “terrifying” scene as a whole pack of dogs ran through the area as the cats ate with “dogs running everywhere, completely out of control”, with cats “fleeing in all directions”.

“If anything has happened to any of my animals, there will be hell to pay,” said Celia Hammond, a former model, who runs the charity which bears her name. Celia Hammond Animal Trust has a number of centres across London and the South East, which looks after cats and finding them suitable homes to be adopted into.
The sanctuary in Sussex is home to 130 cats, who live there full time. Given the usual safety of its rural surrounding the cats are free to roam around the 100 acres of idyllic woodland and fields which surround the sanctuary.





The East Sussex and Romney Marsh hunt, whose hounds strayed into the sanctuary (Alamy) SOURCE THE independent

In the wake of the incident volunteers described many of the animals as being “traumatised”.
“It looked like a whole pack of hounds had split into two,” she said. “Half of them went after a fox, and half after a deer. And then they were coming into the sanctuary from all different areas – they’ve got their horns, they were in full cry. They were after the fox and after the deer.”
After the hunt left the area, 60 cats were missing. Overnight, staff and volunteers searched for the animals amid heavy rain. Many of the missing returned during the night, but some are still unaccounted for and Celia fears they may have been killed.

“There was 21 missing at the last count,” said Ms Hammond. “We don’t know what’s happened to them. It’s absolutely outrageous – I’m so angry, I’m so upset,” she said. “We bring these cats down to what’s supposed to be a sanctuary, where they’re supposed to be safe.
“If they’ve got health problems or they’re old and a bit doddery, we keep them here safely. For this to happen in the place where they’re supposed to be safe – we just feel violated.”
Ms Hammond said that the volunteers who were trying to chase the dogs from the grounds had been offered money by members of the hunt to help.
Representatives for the East Sussex and Romney Marsh hunt admitted that its members had found themselves on the sanctuary’s grounds, but said that the dogs hadn’t come into contact with the animals. They claim that they left as soon as they could. Gerald Sumner, a member of the hunt, said that the hounds had been rounded up and taken away quickly and hadn’t interacted with the cats.
A spokesperson said the dogs were following a trail elsewhere but "a few" had found their way into the sanctuary.
Police attended the sanctuary, helping to remove the dogs and checking whether any offence had been committed.
“We had a call at 4pm on Tuesday 9 January about some hounds which had inadvertently strayed on to a property at Stubb Lane, Brede, near Rye,” a police spokesperson said. “The hounds were rounded up by the hunt staff with police assistance.
“The huntmaster apologised to the property owner, and there has been no report of any injury or damage or of any criminal offence being committed.”

The cats live in purpose-built accommodation and are free to roam the extensive grounds (Harry Cockburn) SOURCE THE independent

Ms Hammond confirmed that she and the sanctuary were yet to make a complaint. But that was because she and the volunteers have been busily searching for the lost animals, she said.
“We haven’t made a complaint because we’ve had other priorities – this wasn’t our first priority,” she said. “Our first priority was to find the cats, who might be lying dead in the undergrowth.”

Last year, a member of the same hunt was filmed whipping an animal rights activist during a fox hunt and launching a foul-mouthed rant at them. It is also not the first time hunters have disrupted an animal sanctuary – in August, a Somerset and Devon hunt chased a stag through a shelter.



A spokesperson for the hunt involved confirmed that its dogs had been involved in the incident, though said that it was "not aware of any missing animals or injuries" and that only a few dogs had veered off their course.
"We can confirm that hounds met at Udimore, near Rye on 9th January and were legally trail-hunting throughout the day to comply with the Hunting Act 2004," a spokesperson said. "Although nobody from the hunt witnessed hounds following anything other than their original trail, it is suspected that a few hounds might have deviated from their trail onto the scent of a live quarry which they followed into the wildlife sanctuary. The hunt staff immediately removed the hounds from within the confines of the sanctuary with the help of the police who were also called.
"The huntsman apologised to the owners right away for any inconvenience caused and mutually agreed with the owners that the hunt would repair any damage to fencing if any had occurred, although there was none visible at the time. The hunt is not aware of any missing animals or of any injuries caused during this unfortunate incident."​





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