| China to solicit public opinion for hunting auction (Xinhua)
 Updated: 2006-08-15 15:25
 BEIJING -- China's State Forestry Administration (SFA) is to solicit 
suggestions from the public before deciding whether to continue the auction of 
hunting quotas and licenses. 
 SFA spokesman Cao Qingyao said on Tuesday that the SFA would further research 
the issue and information would be released as soon as possible. 
 But he could not give details about how the public could make submissions. 
 Angry Chinese Internet users criticized the auction for the right to hunt 289 
animals of 14 species under national protection when the news was released last 
week. 
 Internet users claimed the auction was purely profit-driven. 
 The SFA, China's wildlife protection agency, said the animals were not 
endangered species and restricted hunting would help manage their stocks. 
 The SFA postponed the auction as a result of the response from the public, 
which it described as "beyond expectations" last Friday, just two days before 
the planned auction on August 13. 
 The auction was scheduled to take place in Chengdu, capital of southwestern 
Sichuan Province. 
 Both Chinese and foreigners would have been allowed bid on the right to hunt 
animals, said Cao. 
 However, as Chinese are prohibited from owning firearms, they face 
restrictions when it comes to hunting. 
 It was to have been the first such auction in China. 
 Foreigners were previously allowed to hunt in China only after completing a 
complicated application process. By the end of last year, China had earned 36.39 
million U.S. dollars by allowing 1,101 foreigners to hunt 1,347 animals since 
1985. 
 China's hunting quota rose from just three individual animals in 1985 to 123 
in 2005. The country has opened 25 hunting ranges to foreigners. 
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