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Early data indicates Idaho wolf population is holding steady

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Early data indicates Idaho wolf population is holding steady

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Idaho’s wolf inhabitants seems to be holding regular regardless of current modifications by lawmakers that permit expanded strategies and seasons for killing wolves, the state’s high wildlife official mentioned Thursday.

Idaho Division of Fish and Sport Director Ed Schriever instructed lawmakers on the Pure Sources Interim Committee that preliminary information on human-caused and pure wolf mortality appears to be like much like three earlier years.

He additionally mentioned the company is utilizing modifications in wolf searching legal guidelines that would result in killing extra wolves in areas with livestock conflicts or the place elk herds are beneath inhabitants targets, probably via a wolf-killing reimbursement program for expert trappers and hunters.

“I feel one of the simplest ways to explain Idaho’s inhabitants proper now could be that it’s pretty secure, and it’s fluctuating round 1,250,” he instructed lawmakers. “A part of the yr it’s beneath that; a part of the yr it’s above that. However the inhabitants is fluctuating round 1,250.”

Schriever, in a graph offered to lawmakers, confirmed the state’s wolf inhabitants from 2019 to 2021 fluctuating with a excessive of greater than 1,600 in Might when wolf pups are born right down to a low of about 800 in April as wolves die via pure mortality, searching or trapping.

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Schriever mentioned that the identical sample with probably related numbers might be repeated this yr. However the company gained’t have a strong estimate for the 2022 wolf inhabitants till January when it analyzes further info and hundreds of thousands of pictures taken by distant cameras.

The company in earlier years picked August because the date to set the wolf inhabitants, placing it at about 1,500. The 1,250 estimate is a snapshot of the wolf inhabitants in November, at concerning the midpoint of the annual inhabitants fluctuation.

Idaho lawmakers in 2021 authorized a regulation backed by ranchers that significantly expanded wolf killing in what some lawmakers acknowledged may scale back the wolf inhabitants by 90%. Backers mentioned it will scale back the wolf inhabitants and assaults on livestock whereas additionally boosting deer and elk herds.

Idaho wildlife officers additionally final yr introduced the state would make out there $200,000 to be divided into funds to hunters and trappers who kill wolves within the state.

Nevertheless, there was concern the brand new guidelines may overshoot the mark as a result of if the state’s wolf inhabitants have been to fall beneath 150, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service may take over administration of wolves from the state.

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“In the event you go beneath that (150), that’s unhealthy information,” Schriever instructed lawmakers.

Schriever cited a 2009 Fish and Wildlife Service rule delisting northern Rocky Mountain grey wolves. The rule was blocked by a federal court docket however took impact when authorized by Congress in 2011. Schriever famous the rule has a wolf inhabitants for Idaho fluctuating round 500, with a possible excessive of about 650 and a low of about 350.

“I feel there are an entire bunch of us that might be completely satisfied if we may get to what’s described within the federal delisting rule as a inhabitants fluctuating round 500,” Schriever mentioned.

Getting there might be difficult as a result of wolves, Schriever famous, get cautious when hunted.

He gave a breakdown of 389 wolves killed final yr by some 50,000 hunters and trappers, noting solely 72 hunters and trappers killed multiple wolf, accounting for 236 wolves in all that yr.

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“These individuals are crucial within the idea of managing the wolf inhabitants,” Schriever mentioned, suggesting the reimbursement program might be a key element to focus on wolves in particular areas of the state.

“The reimbursement program could, in actual fact, be crucial in conserving a few of these extremely expert individuals engaged on this for an extended time period,” he mentioned.

Apart from establishing the reimbursement program, the regulation handed in 2021 additionally expanded wolf killing strategies to incorporate trapping and snaring wolves on a single searching tag, no restriction on searching hours, utilizing night-vision gear with a allow, utilizing bait and canines and permitting searching from motor autos. It additionally approved year-round wolf trapping on personal property.

Montana lawmakers additionally modified their legal guidelines to develop wolf killing. That prompted the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service late final yr, on the request of environmental teams, to announce a yearlong evaluation to see if wolves within the western U.S. needs to be relisted and once more obtain federal safety beneath the Endangered Species Act. Such a transfer would take away Idaho’s administration of the species.

On one other entrance, a U.S. District Court docket choose in August rejected a request by conservation teams to briefly block Idaho’s expanded wolf trapping and snaring guidelines. Environmental teams mentioned Idaho’s expanded wolf-killing rules violate the Endangered Species Act as a result of they may result in the unlawful killing of federally protected grizzly bears and Canada lynx. Schriever mentioned Thursday that no grizzlies have to date been caught in a wolf lure.

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It’s not clear when the court docket will make a ruling on the deserves in that case.

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Ukraine not ready to compromise with Russia, says Zelenskiy aide

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Ukraine not ready to compromise with Russia, says Zelenskiy aide
Ukraine is not ready to compromise with Russia and give up any territory to end the war, a senior Ukrainian official said on Tuesday when asked about U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump’s declaration that he could quickly end the conflict.
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Dutch king swears in a new government 7 months after elections

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Dutch king swears in a new government 7 months after elections

The Netherlands has a different prime minister for the first time in 14 years as Dutch King Willem-Alexander swore in the country’s new government Tuesday, more than seven months after elections dominated by a far-right, anti-Islam party.

Dick Schoof, former head of the Dutch intelligence agency and counterterrorism office, signed the official royal decree at Huis Ten Bosch Palace, saying he “declared and promised” to uphold his duties as the country’s prime minister. The 67-year-old was formally installed alongside 15 other ministers who make up the country’s right-leaning coalition.

FORMER INTELLIGENCE CHIEF NOMINATED AS NEW PRIME MINISTER BY THE NETHERLANDS’ INCOMING GOVERNMENT

The anti-immigration party of firebrand Geert Wilders won the largest share of seats in elections last year but it took 223 days to form a government.

The new coalition quickly faced criticism of its marquee anti-immigration policies — by its own party members, as well as opposition groups. Protesters gathered in front of the palace where the ceremony took place on Tuesday, with one woman carrying a sign asking: “Are we democratically getting rid of our democracy?”

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The four parties in the coalition are Wilders’ Party for Freedom, outgoing Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s center-right People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy, the populist Farmer Citizen Movement and the centrist New Social Contract party.

Dutch King Willem-Alexander meets with incoming Prime Minister Dick Schoof, right, in The Hague, Netherlands, Monday, July 1, 2024.  (Patrick van Katwijk/Pool Photo via AP)

The formal agreement creating the new coalition, titled “Hope, courage and pride,” introduces strict measures on asylum-seekers, scraps family reunification for refugees and seeks to reduce the number of international students studying in the country.

Opposition from other coalition partners prevented the controversial Wilders from taking the prime minister’s job. During the monthslong negotiations, he backpedaled on several of his most extreme views, including withdrawing draft legislation that would have banned mosques, Islamic schools and the Quran.

For the first time since World War II, the Netherlands is now led by a prime minister who is not aligned with a political party. Before serving as chief of the country’s top intelligence agency, Schoof was previously the counterterror chief and the head of the country’s Immigration and Naturalization Service.

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The other government ministers were sworn in Tuesday according to seniority of their departments. One minister, Femke Wiersma who will head the agriculture portfolio, made her declaration in Frisian — the country’s second official language alongside Dutch.

Although the November elections were widely seen as a win for the far right, political youth organizations are already pushing back on the ambitions of the new government. Ahead of the swearing-in ceremony, youth groups from six parties, including two of the coalition partners, called for a softening on asylum plans.

“Although the influx must be limited, it is of great importance that we receive people here fairly and with dignity,” Eva Brandemann, chairperson of the youth wing of the New Social Contract, told Dutch public broadcaster NOS.

Her counterpart in Rutte’s party, which brought down the government last summer over concerns about the number of family reunifications for refugees, said that problems stemmed from administration, not migration.

“The problem will only get bigger if you don’t fix it,” Mauk Bresser, the chair of the People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy youth organization told The Associated Press.

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While Bresser thinks the number of refugees coming to the Netherlands should be reduced, his group says those already here should have their claims processed in a timely fashion and be given the opportunity to integrate.

The new agreement slashes the country’s education budget by nearly 1 billion euros — about $1.06 billion — prompting pushback from universities. “Students will not get the education they deserve,” Nivja de Jong, a languages professor at Leiden University, told the AP. She’s part of a group of academics pushing back against the proposed cuts by delivering lunchtime talks about the importance of their research.

The new government will now spend the summer firming the coalition agreement into a governing plan.

The Netherlands isn’t the only country seeing a rise of anti-immigration, far-right views. Last month’s EU elections saw a similar shift, and French voters face a decisive choice on July 7 in the runoff of snap parliamentary elections that could see the country’s first far-right government since the World War II Nazi occupation.

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Hungary's Orban pushes for ceasefire deal during Kyiv visit

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Hungary's Orban pushes for ceasefire deal during Kyiv visit

Viktor Orban visited Ukraine’s capital for the first time since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, and offered some suggestions for ending the war.

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During his first visit to neighbouring Ukraine since Russia’s full-scale invasion, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán told President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Tuesday that the war was Europe’s “most important issue,” and recommended an immediate cease-fire.

Orban is widely seen as having the warmest relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin among European Union leaders, and his visit was a rare gesture in a tumultuous relationship with Ukraine as Budapest has repeatedly leaned toward Moscow.

The Hungarian prime minister has routinely blocked, delayed or watered down EU efforts to extend assistance to Ukraine and to sanction Moscow over its war, frustrating both Zelenskyy and other EU leaders.

But following talks in Kyiv on Tuesday, Orbán appeared to open the door to a new phase of bilateral relations, saying “the time had come” for such an official visit.

“We are trying to leave the disputes of the past behind us and focus on the period ahead,” Orbán said in brief comments to journalists following the talks. “We would like relations between our two countries to be much better.”

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Ukraine and Hungary have had a tense relationship since the war began, with Orbán portraying himself as a champion for peace and calling for an immediate cease-fire and peace talks without expanding on what that would mean for Ukraine’s territorial integrity. He reiterated that call Tuesday, saying it would “provide an opportunity to speed up peace negotiations.”

But Zelenskyy on Tuesday said he was “grateful” for the humanitarian support Hungary had provided to Ukrainian refugees fleeing the war. He also said Hungary could play a role in organising a second iteration of a peace summit that was held in Switzerland last month, which brought together dozens of world leaders.

“Today, we discussed in detail how Hungary can show further leadership in preparing the second summit,” Zelenskyy said, adding that he would like for the event to take place this year.

Orbán’s visit comes the day after Hungary took over the six-month rotating presidency of the EU, a position that has little real power but can be used to set the tone of the bloc’s agenda. Hungarian officials have indicated that they will act as “honest brokers” in the role despite worries from some EU lawmakers that Hungary’s democratic track record makes it unfit to lead the bloc.

During the visit, the Hungarian prime minister acknowledged Russia’s invasion, and said his aim in travelling to Kyiv was “to understand how we could be helpful to Ukraine in the forthcoming six months.”

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“The issue of peace is not only important for Ukraine, it is important for the whole of Europe,” Orbán said. “This war, which you are now suffering, has a profound effect on European security.”

The war is “the most important issue for Europe,” he said.

The Hungarian premier, a self-described adherent of “illiberal democracy,” has long been accused by his European partners of dismantling democratic institutions at home and acting as an obstinate spoiler of key EU policy priorities. The bloc has frozen more than €18.6 billion ($20 billion) in funding to Budapest over alleged rule-of-law and corruption violations, and Orbán has conducted numerous anti-EU campaigns depicting it as an overcentralized, repressive organization.

Orbán has also long accused Kyiv of mistreating an ethnic Hungarian minority in Ukraine’s western region of Zakarpattia, a community he has used to justify his refusal to provide weapons to Ukraine or allow their transfer across the two countries’ shared border.

But on Tuesday, Orbán said he sees a “good chance” of achieving progress in the minority community’s affairs and agreed to a proposal by Zelenskyy to set up a Ukrainian school in Hungary for refugees.

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“These families need to be taken care of. They need jobs, they need a livelihood, they need security, they need a good school for their children, they need good teachers,” Orbán said.

His visit comes as he seeks to recruit members into a new nationalist alliance that he hopes will soon become the largest right-wing group in the European Parliament. On Sunday, Orbán met in Vienna with the leaders of Austria’s far-right Freedom Party and the main Czech opposition party, announcing the formation of the new group, “Patriots for Europe.”

The trio would need to attract lawmakers from at least four more EU countries to successfully form a group in Europe’s new parliament, which held elections in June. Right-wing nationalist parties across Europe strengthened their position in the elections, but ideological differences over the war in Ukraine and cooperation with Russia have often prevented deeper alliances among some of the parties.

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