-
FIFA planning for World Cup to 'go ahead as scheduled' amid Iran uncertainty
-
Braves outfielder Profar's full MLB season ban upheld: report
-
Mideast war exposing Europe's reliance on Gulf flights, airlines warn
-
Ghalibaf: Iran's new strongman running war effort
-
UN shipping body urges 'safe maritime corridor' in Gulf
-
Venezuelan student freed after months in US immigration custody
-
Trump to Japan PM: 'Why didn't you tell me about Pearl Harbor?'
-
US mulls lifting sanctions on Iranian oil at sea despite war on Tehran
-
IMF raises concern over global inflation, output over Iran war
-
Middle East war weighs on global trade outlook: WTO
-
Cunningham out for NBA Pistons with collapsed lung
-
Belarus frees 250 political prisoners in US-brokered deal
-
Iran attacks on gas and oil refineries heighten fears over war fallout
-
Fernandez 'completely committed' to Chelsea insists Rosenior
-
Call to add Nazi camps to UNESCO list
-
England cricket chiefs to front up to media over Ashes flop
-
'Miracle': Europe reconnects with lost spacecraft
-
Nigeria 'challenged by terrorism', president says on UK state visit
-
Woltemade deployed too deep to be dangerous at Newcastle, says Nagelsmann
-
Wimbledon expansion plan gets legal boost
-
EU summit fails to rally Orban behind stalled Ukraine loan
-
New Morocco coach praises 'well-deserved' Cup of Nations decision
-
Senegal to appeal CAF Africa Cup of Nations decision
-
'Mixing things up': Nagelsmann goes for flexibility in new Germany squad
-
Record-setter Hodgkinson hopes 'fourth time lucky' at world indoors
-
Atletico target Romero says his focus on Spurs' survival bid
-
Karalis hits prime form to threaten Duplantis surprise
-
Freshly returned Mbappe leads France squad for Brazil, Colombia friendlies
-
US earns its lowest-ever score on freedom index
-
Europe's super elite teach English clubs a Champions League lesson
-
What we know about the UK's deadly meningitis outbreak
-
Karl handed Germany debut as Musiala misses out with injury
-
What cargo ships are passing Hormuz strait?
-
Bank of England holds interest rate amid Middle East war
-
Energy prices soar, Iran and US trade threats after Qatar gas hit
-
'Surreal' for F1 world champion Norris to have Tussauds waxwork
-
Iran hangs three men in first executions over January protests
-
North Korea, Philippines qualify for 2027 Women's World Cup
-
Man Utd boss Carrick expects hard test against resolute Bournemouth
-
Oil prices surge, stocks sink on energy shock fears
-
Alibaba pins hopes on AI as quarterly net profit drops
-
Oil soars 10% after Qatar energy sites hit in Mideast war
-
Defiant Orban digs in over blocked Ukraine loan at EU talks
-
Iran 'boycotting' USA but not World Cup: football federation chief
-
Tokyo's dazzling cherry blossom season officially begins
-
Energy prices surge, stocks sink amid rising energy shock fears
-
Iran causes 'extensive' damage to Qatar gas hub, sparks Trump warning
-
Baby monkey Punch acclimatising, making new friends at Japan zoo
-
Labubu creators hope for monster film hit in Sony co-production
-
Kings of K-pop: What to know about BTS's comeback
Kazakhstan mulls endangered antelope cull after population boom
Kazakhstan is considering culls of its endangered saiga antelope, the ecology ministry told AFP Thursday, after citing scientific advice about the threat posed to agriculture since the population rebounded.
Conservation efforts that included a crackdown on poaching have seen the saiga's numbers in Kazakhstan soar from under 200,000 following a die-off in 2015 to 1.3 million ahead of this year's spring calving season, officials said.
"We have a scientific recommendation to regulate the population of saigas," a spokeswoman said.
"We are studying it, but no final decision has been taken," she added, without offering any deadline for the decision, set to affect some 80,000 animals.
The former Soviet country's vast steppe is home to a majority of the world's Saiga, known for its distinctive bulbous nose and the horns whose status in Chinese medicine fuelled the poaching.
Russia's Kalmykia region and Mongolia host smaller numbers of the animal.
A ban on hunting introduced in the late 1990s is set to run out in 2023 and Kazakhstan's ecology minister Serikkali Brekeshev suggested Wednesday that the ministry had "made a decision" about regularly culling up to 10 percent of the Ural saiga population in western Kazakhstan -- the largest of three saiga population groups in the Central Asian nation.
"Today...saigas cross over not only into pasture land, but also farm land. It's a definite problem," Brekeshev was quoted as saying by local media.
But the ministry spokeswoman told AFP that any decision would need to be approved by President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, and that the "position of society" would be taken into account.
Kazakhstan's leaders intensified their crackdown on illegal hunting in 2019, after two state rangers were killed by poachers, causing popular anger.
Kazakhstan's 2015 saiga antelope die-off saw more than half the global population at the time wiped out by what scientists later determined was a nasal bacterium that spread in unusually warm and humid conditions.
T.Sanchez--AT