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Source: 'Reuters - General news videos'
Description: Once a common sight among the trees, many of Japan's bear hunters
are now older, and their numbers are dwindling. As the creatures move closer
to towns and villages, and attacks on people increase, concerned residents
wonder what will happen when these hunters can no longer do their job. Lauren
Cook reports.
Short Link: https://refini.tv/4fVTll5
Video Transcript:
In rural Japan, a gunshot rings out. A bear slumps in a cage.
This brown bear got too close to a human community. It wasn't right here, but
over that way, in the middle of the town and on the roads close by. In this
kind of situation, we have no choice other than to trap them.
Bears are making their way closer to homes, and putting people's lives at
risk. Keeping the townspeople safe often falls on the shoulders of a dwindling
band of aging hunters, like 75-year-old Haruo Ikegami.
I'm often the first one that gets there when they're caught like this. And I
always say, “Oh, come on. You're already in there. I can't bear it.â€
Once a common sight among the trees, hunters like Ikegami, are now older and
fewer in number than before. Japan's population is both aging and shrinking.
As of 2020, about 60% of gun license holders, like Ikegami, are over 60. And
in areas where bears roam, some residents wonder what will happen when these
hunters can no longer do their job. In the town of Naie, Tatsuhito Yamagishi
has accused the local government of taking hunters for granted.
They say we should train new hunters, but there's nothing specific on how we
should do this. Who's going to hold the training sessions and the workshops?
In a few year’s time, when we are all over 70-years-old, will there even
be anybody left who could teach people how to hunt bears, even if they wanted
to?
Naie's local government declined to comment on the dispute with Yamagishi, but
said officials were taking steps to address the bear problem. Japan's
environment ministry says it subsidizes local governments to train officials
and conduct bear drills. But the country's reliance on recreational bear
hunters could become unsustainable, according to the hunters themselves,
officials, residents, and experts Reuter spoke to. Both black and brown bears
habitats have been expanding, in part, because of depopulation in rural areas,
experts say. Some believe this and less managed farmland may be making bears
more daring, and the animals appear to be raising cubs closer to human
settlements, causing them to fear people less than before. All this has
contributed to an increase in human bear incidents. In the 12 months through
March 2024, 219 people were attacked. Six, fatally. More than 9,000 black and
brown bears were trapped and culled over that period, according to Japan's
environment ministry. 84-year-old Katsuo Harada carries scars from over 20
years ago when a bear sank its teeth into his skull.
I was like it was gnawing on a raw radish, scraping and crunching. I passed
out at the sound, and I don't know what happened beyond that.
Harada is now part of a group that helps keep problematic wildlife at bay.
I feel that I have to protect the people living here. Whenever I set a trap,
you saw today there are four locations. I'm driven forward by the thought that
if I hadn't laid the traps, someone could have been killed.
One common way to trap bears is by using a large cage with bait, like a deer
carcass, salmon, or honey. The trap is designed so that the creature steps on
a metal plate when it goes near the bait, triggering the door to close. The
local authorities then make a call on what to do with the animal and may
involve licensed hunters to kill it. The trapped bear is looked after and fed
until it is culled. As an alternative solution, some companies are turning to
technology. This monster wolf robot, growls, barks, and emits threats. Costing
about $2,500, it is triggered by a sensor and powered by solar energy. It has
shown some success, but Yamagishi explains that it takes years for humans to
learn how to trap bears and insists their expertise will remain indispensable.
Responding to the increase in attacks, the Japanese government this year,
proposed relaxing rules around gun use to make it easier to shoot bears in
urban areas. But hunters say it's hard to find new recruits, because the job
is expensive, unappealing, and exhausting. Some get JPY8,000, or about $50
from local governments for a bear cull. This might cover expenses and fuel,
Ikegami says, but little else. A system is needed, they suggest, where hunters
are paid enough to support a family. Because if the younger generation doesn't
take up the torch, the last line of defense will soon be gone