Minister's heartbreaking final verdict on Geronimo the alpaca who's tested ...

Minister's heartbreaking final verdict on Geronimo the alpaca who's tested ...
Minister's heartbreaking final verdict on Geronimo the alpaca who's tested ...

Cabinet Minister George Eustice today defends the decision to put down Geronimo the alpaca – despite the owner telling him he will have 'blood on his hands'.

Writing in The Mail on Sunday, the Environment Minister admits it is 'soul-destroying' to have to kill animals, but insists it is the right decision to stop the spread of disease. 

The MP – and former farmer – says: 'While there are moments of joy and optimism in farming, every livestock farmer has to get used to their share of tragedy and loss.'

A High Court judge has ruled that Geronimo has tuberculosis on the basis of two positive tests. 

But his owner, Helen Macdonald, today claims the tests were 'misused' and calls for Mr Eustice to intervene as a last resort. 

Cabinet Minister George Eustice has defended the decision to put down Geronimo the alpaca – despite the owner Helen Macdonald (pictured) telling him he will have 'blood on his hands'

Cabinet Minister George Eustice has defended the decision to put down Geronimo the alpaca – despite the owner Helen Macdonald (pictured) telling him he will have 'blood on his hands'

She has also appealed to Carrie Johnson, the Prime Minister's wife, to save the condemned animal, and has won the support of celebrities, including actress Joanna Lumley.

Writing for the first time on the issue that has split Britain, Mr Eustice tells how his own farming family had to kill a beloved cow who tested positive for TB.

He says Rose was 'a cow that my father said was one of the best he had ever seen. To make matters worse, she had sadly lost her calf the previous year. 

As a result, she had to be removed for slaughter having never had a living calf. It was soul-destroying.'

Mr Eustice says he has looked at Geronimo's case 'in detail' several times over the past three years. 

Explaining why he has decided not to call off the death sentence, he writes that the test used on Geronimo is 'over 99 per cent accurate with a 'false positive' in only 0.34 per cent of cases.

The Environment Minister (pictured) admitted that it is 'soul-destroying' to have to kill animals, but insists it is the right decision to stop the spread of disease

The Environment Minister (pictured) admitted that it is 'soul-destroying' to have to kill animals, but insists it is the right decision to stop the spread of disease

'However, it is not a very sensitive test. That is to say, in around 30 per cent of cases it won't detect an infection even when one is present. Two consecutive positive test results is a very strong indicator of the presence of the disease.'

The Minister also spoke of the dangers of bovine TB to livestock and in part blamed 'inaction' by Tony Blair's government for the situation. 

Yes, Prime Minister, it's a nightmare! 

By Brendan Carlin, Political Correspondent for the Mail On Sunday

Boris Johnson may not be willing to save Geronimo, but his fictional predecessor Jim Hacker would have intervened – if only for the favourable headlines.

At least, that's the message from a 1986 episode of the BBC comedy Yes, Prime Minister in which PM Hacker – played by Paul Eddington, right – springs to the rescue of a dog lost on a MoD artillery range.

Hacker basks in glowing press coverage after ordering the Army in to save Benjy the old English sheep dog, beloved pet of eight-year-orphan Linda.

Advised by wily Cabinet Secretary Sir Humphrey Appleby that it will boost his flagging popularity, Hacker jumps at the chance and is rewarded by newspapers saying 'a real heart beats inside No 10'. 

That's before Sir Humphrey, played by Nigel Hawthorne, tells him the operation has cost a cool £310,000.

Hacker only ordered the rescue after hearing pleas from his wife. Initially, he was irritated that the TV news covered the dog story and not his performance at Prime Minister's Questions. 

'Kids lose dogs every day,' he fumed, adding: 'The future defence of Britain was being fought out in the great forum of the nation and what do they give the viewers? A re-run of Lassie Come Home!'

So the lesson for Camp Geronimo? Get Carrie Johnson on side and the alpaca may live. 

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He writes: 'There are no easy answers when it comes to dealing with TB in cattle' and adds that each week on average more than 500 animals have to be culled due to infection in England. 

'Behind every one of those cases is a farmer who has suffered loss and tragedy,' he says.

Ms Macdonald, 50, has repeatedly appealed to Boris Johnson and Mr Eustice to halt the destruction order which means Geronimo – named after an Apache chief – must be put down within 30 days of it coming into effect last Thursday.

More than 90,000 people have signed a petition asking the Prime Minister to step in, and tomorrow hundreds of supporters are expected to attend a protest march in Whitehall.

But Downing Street has refused to grant a stay of execution.

In an impassioned interview with The Mail on Sunday, Ms Macdonald accused officials of dishonesty and said: 'I haven't accepted for a moment that Geronimo is going to die.'

Speaking at her Gloucestershire farm, she said: 'My plan is simple. I'm asking George Eustice to pick up the phone and justify to me how his officials can be so dishonest and yet nobody – certainly not him – has noticed. They keep saying this is a valid test when it patently isn't. It is an abuse of their power and position.'

She has previously said Mr Eustice would have 'blood on his hands' if the destruction order was executed.

Geronimo, an eight-year old male, was imported from New Zealand in 2017. He was given

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