Prominent celebrities have added their voices to concern over the pollution in the river Wye.
Linking to an article on the river in last Friday's Guardian, author and broadcaster Stephen Fry told his 12.4 million Twitter followers: "Wye oh Wye - read and weep."
Wye oh Wye - read and weep https://t.co/jlkmgC3cw1
— Stephen Fry (@stephenfry) June 10, 2022
Meanwhile, Gardeners' World presenter and Herefordshire resident Monty Don, also retweeting the piece, wrote: "It is appalling that this is condoned. It has stop.
"Factory farming is turning this beautiful British river into an open sewer."
It is appalling that this is condoned. It has stop.
— Monty Don (@TheMontyDon) June 10, 2022
Factory farming is turning this beautiful British river into an open sewer | George Monbiot https://t.co/lB5E1RhJnd
In the article, journalist and campaigner George Monbiot argues that the Wye "is on the brink" due to pollution from the large numbers of chicken "factories" now operating in Herefordshire and Powys.
The £1 million-a-year profits these can generate "might help to explain the intimidation and vandalism reported to me by some of the local people who object to them", Monbiot writes.
One such local quoted in the piece fears that "someone’s going to get firebombed or shot" as a consequence.
RELATED NEWS:
- Government failing to avert 'impending death' of river Wye
- Herefordshire anglers join opposition to chicken farm plan
- Government's river Wye protection 'hopelessly inadequate'
Consultation on the latest bid to create a 215,000-bird intensive chicken unit in Herefordshire, in Lower Hergest by the river Arrow, ends tomorrow.
Meanwhile, Hereford and South Herefordshire MP Jesse Norman last week called in Parliament for a national recovery fund for rivers, funded by fines on polluters.
An “all-river strategy... might be a solution to the Wye's problems”, he suggested.
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