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Reuters
Reuters
Environment
By Piroschka van de Wouw

Burrowing badgers threaten to undermine Dutch rail system

FILE PHOTO: A young badger stands next to an old fallen tree in a wood in Llandeilo, South Wales, Britain July 19, 2017. REUTERS/Rebecca Naden/File Photo

Badgers have dug out a home underneath a major rail line in the Netherlands, leaving tens of thousands of passengers facing delays.

Train traffic has been halted, possibly for weeks, between two major southern cities, Den Bosch and Eindhoven, due to worries that the badgers' tunnels have weakened the ground under the tracks.

FILE PHOTO: European badgers are seen in the evening near their burrow in Puszcza Piska Forest near Ransk, Poland July 14, 2017. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/File Photo

But the company that maintains the country's rail network says the badgers are protected by law and must be removed before repairs can begin.

"Badgers are beautiful animals ... but it's clear they are a problem for our safety on the railways," said Aldert Baas, spokesman for ProRail.

The Dutch government on Wednesday said that 50,000 people per day use the affected train line. Travellers are either being shifted to buses or following a different route, adding 30-60 minutes to travel times.

FILE PHOTO: Empty tracks are seen on the departure train platform at Amsterdam Railway Station in Amsterdam, Netherlands May 28, 2019. REUTERS/Eva Plevier/File Photo

The plan to get things back on track is to create a new home nearby for the badgers and then place a metal barrier along the tracks so they cannot return.

Baas said it was not clear how long that will take.

Badgers, not an endangered species, nearly died out in the Netherlands in the 1980s but have since made a strong recovery.

Vivianne Heijnen, the deputy minister for traffic and infrastructure, said in a letter to parliament there were 40 places that badger dens, known as setts, were close to train tracks.

"I have asked ProRail to keep a close watch on the activities of badgers," Heijnen said.

"Once this is over, the process will be evaluated for possible improvement."

(Reporting by Piroschka van de Wouw and Toby Sterling; Editing by Alison Williams)

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