The rooster is the unofficial symbol of France and the emblem of its rugby and football teams (Photo: Yahoo News) |
Sebastien Verney, Marcelās owners from Vinzieux, a small village in Franceās south-eastern dĆ©partement of Ardeche, said they were ādeeply shockedā by the death of their rooster.
āThe rural way of life is increasingly under attack from behaviour that is not punishedā, Verney was quoted by AFP.
The family have taken their case to court, helped by the Fondation 30 millions dāamis (āthe 30 million friends Foundationā), an animal welfare NGO.
Theyāve also appealed to public opinion with a petition aiming to ādefend animals and rural areas from behaviours that threaten life even in the countrysideā.
Marcel, they write, āwas showered with love by our children and was our homeās pride and joy, punctuating our daily life with a few songs and his beautiful presence in the henhouseā.
His killing and the āattempted poisoningā of the henhouse have destroyed āthe little haven of peace we had built for our family and our animals,ā they wrote.
āOur rural activities, our animals, have the right to exist and to live in peace, respected in their specificities and in their being,ā they was quoted by Euro News as saying.
The petition has so far garnered 74,500 signatures.
Verneyās neighbour has later admitted to shooting the bird. He has been charged with animal cruelty and unlawful use of a weapon among other offences and is due to go on trial in December.
The rooster serves as the unofficial symbol of France and the emblem of its rugby and football teams.
Le Coq Maurice and its owner (Photo: Huffington Post) |
Marcelās case echoed that of another rooster, Maurice, albeit with a much darker ending.
Le Coq Maurice became a symbol of tension between rural France and encroaching urbanity in a court battle over his early-morning crowing after a retired couple with a holiday home on the island of Oleron in western France took legal action to try and silence him, AFP reported.
Judges last year upheld the birdās right to start the day with a cheery cock-a-doodle-doo (cocorico in French), in what was seen as a triumph for rural traditions.
The fight over Maurice, who died of natural causes in May, led to a draft law to be brought before parliament introducing the concept of āsensory heritageā in rural France.
The proposed legislation aims to define certain sounds and smells as intrinsic to rural life such as the roosterās crow, the donkeyās bray or the scent of manure and protect them from ālegal actions often brought by vacationers of āneoruralsā, who cannot stand this kind of nuisanceā.
Just last November, a French court had to issue a ruling allowing a flock of ducks residing in a backyard in the southwestern Landes region to keep quacking after complaints from neighbours.
Back in Vinzieux, Marcel may be no more, but he left a legacy of five youngsters raring to take up his mantle, said Verney.