Indian’s Diary – e News Weekly
Spreading the light of humanity & freedom
Editor: Nagaraja.M.R.. Vol.13..Issue.43........28 / 10 / 2017
They are brought into the final ground, where at least a thousand animals are stored. This is their last open air. They are kept here for four days, hungry and thirsty. Then their legs are broken and eyes poked, so that a ‘Certificate’ can be obtained about their uselessness. The hunger and thirst of four days cause the hemoglobin to move from blood in to fat. The meat with higher hemoglobin fetches better prices.
Now these animals are pushed into washing showers. Extremely hot water (200 degrees centigrade!) is sprayed on them for five minutes, to soften their skins, so they will be easy to remove. The animal’s faints at this point, but it is not dead yet. Now it is hung upside down with one leg, on a chain-pulley conveyor. Then half of the neck is slit. This drains the blood, but does not kill the animal. After death, the skin swells thick, which sells for a poor price. But the skin of live Animals is still thin, which has better economic value. On one side the blood is dripping from the neck, and on the other side a hole is made in stomach, from which air is pumped inside. This causes the body to swell, making it easier to peel the skin. After removing the leather, the animal is cut into four pieces: head, legs, body, and tail.
"...A wise woman named Linda McCartney once said, %u201CIf slaughterhouses had glass walls, everyone in the world would be a vegetarian%u201D.
"First, rules must be clear so that enforcement is not an inherently subjective process prone to mistakes and abuse. In particular, the downer loophole must be closed. ...The current flawed rule depends on plant workers summoning a USDA inspector back to reevaluate an animal who becomes nonambulatory after initial inspection, in order for the inspector to decide if the animal can be slaughtered, a system that seems bound to fail given the enormous pressure plant workers are under by their company superiors to move the maximum number of animals quickly to slaughter. This system creates financial incentives for precisely those abuses that we witnessed in the undercover footage....
Edited, printed , published owned by NAGARAJA.M.R. @ # LIG-2 No 761, HUDCO FIRST STAGE , OPP WATER WORKS , LAXMIKANTANAGAR , HEBBAL ,MYSURU – 570017 KARNATAKA INDIA
http://thecitizens.torpress2sarn7xw.onion/
Spreading the light of humanity & freedom
Editor: Nagaraja.M.R.. Vol.13..Issue.43........28 / 10 / 2017
SHOCKING IMAGES :
Dark Side of
Eating Meat
ADULTS ONLY
Watch video :
Editorial : Dalits , Muslims & Cow Slaughter
- An
Appeal to H.E.President of India
Bigger stronger animal feeds on smaller weak animal. Law of
Nature. In the same way , all over the world in a particular area
or a country stronger majority community
subjugates the weak , smaller communities.
Since centuries dalits were subjugated into doing menial
jobs and their livelihood depended on whatever was
thrown at them. Civilizations dawned , people
became civilized in their outlook , but deep inside uncivilized ,
animal resides in many people.
There are good as well as bad people in all communities, religions & all
walks of life. Whenever a terrorist strike happens
, Muslims are blamed. For all miseries in India ,
Dalits are blamed. Just imagine if there was no barber , how
civilized a person will be without hair cutting ? Just think there is
no sweeper to clean drainage line , how
houses , roads will be full of excreta , human rejections , how stinky
& disease prone it will be ?
Dalits are doing yeoman commendable service to society
, keeping all the others in a civilized manner in a healthy
environment. Nobody recognizes their service. Since centuries , dalits
were entrusted with the job of removing carcass of cattles, it was not their
choice, it was mandated by majority community at that time. Being utterly
poor , dalits depended on cattle meat for food and
used bones , hides for footwear , etc. . Now , few
individuals all of a sudden are trying to turn upside down , this
centuries old practice and cow vigilantes are attacking dalits. Few
are taking law into their hands. What three great
acharyas – Sri Shankaracharya , Sri Ramanujacharya , Sri
Madhwacharya failed to achieve , what Sri Gowthama Buddha ,
Sri Mahaveera failed to achieve stopping animal killing , now cow
vigilantes are trying to achieve the same with violence.
Say ,
after two decades few groups , individuals will proclaim everybody
must stop eating vegetarian food . Then can all veggies turn
into non veg , not feasible. With regards to certain section of
society eating non veg is a taboo , with others non veg with exclusion of
beef , pork is ok. Food is the choice of individual.
Now ,
let us see the facts for practical way forward :
1. Since
centuries Dalits are in the profession of cow slaughter not
by choice , but by compulsion of times.
2. Since
centuries dalits & others are eating beef as
it is cheaper than other meat.
3. Cows
are holy for hindus equivalent to mother herself and
equivalent to god. Cow products are used since centuries in
hindu religious rituals.
4. In
rural house holds , when a mother dies while delivering baby or
when a mother cann’t breast feed baby due to lack of milk ,
COW in the house hold becomes a surrogate mother for
the baby. Baby feeds , lives on cow’s milk.
5. Inspite
of such great respect many hindu folk sell old ,
barren , diseased cows to muslim or dalit buyers
knowing fully well that buyer cann’t get milk
from the cow only he can get meat & hide from slaughtering it.
Some hindu folk drive away old , diseased , barren
cows from their home. It is same as driving away old , diseased
mother , deserting our own mother.
6. In
many Islamic countries , jewish countries
pig meat / pork is banned , hindus &
Christians who go to such countries for job / business abide
by laws of Islamic countries. They give up eating pork
although way back in their home countries they consume pork.
Practical Way
Forward :
1. Banning
cow slaughter , beef is ok in national interest , in the
interest of religious sentiments of a community.
2. Government
must provide alternate food items to consumers at affordable prices than beef.
3. Government
must extend helping hand to Dalits , Muslims who are in cow
slaughter trade to switch over to other business.
4. Government
must charge sheet the seller of cows , deserter of cows not
merely transporter , buyer or the butcher.
5. Government
must discourage farmers from rearing cattles when they are incapable
of looking after old cattles.
6. Government
must educate people about reducing milk products consumption; When
Milk products consumption reduces automatically rearing of cattle
reduces.
7. Most
important of all , when a pork eating Indian goes
to Saudi Arabia on job assignment and lives there for
two decades. When he can simply give up pork , follow the rule of
pork ban and change his dietary habbits , why cann’t others
reciprocate the same here with respect to beef ban.
8. Government
must adopt a way of educating people about good dietary habbits
rather than policy of stick.
9. Cow
vigilantes who take law into their own hands instead of reporting to
authorities must be legally prosecuted.
10. Government
must set up FREE Cow sheds with adequate
fodder supplies all over the country on urgent basis to accommodate
orphaned cows , diseased cows and old cows. If government fails to
set up it proves it’s vanity.
Bottomline : As
per scientific studies , human beings digestive system has evolved to
digest vegetarian food not non vegetarian food. Choice is
left to consumers.
By SKN WEB - Tuesday, April 28, 2015
India tops in cow slaughterhouse and most
slaughtering are doing Hindus. Recently I just came to know about the
slaughterhouse rank in India, and most slaughtering are doing Hindus. After
Brazil India is second highest, below is a pathetic story about slaughterhouse
processes. Here India’s largest al Kabeer slaughterhouse taken in. I am not
sure about the authenticity of this write-up, please being verified yourself.
Al-Kabeer exports Pvt.Ltd. Rudraram Village,
Andhra Pradesh, Patancheru, Medak, Hyderabad – 500 033.
Do you know that the biggest
cow slaughterhouse (cow killing factory) in the WORLD is located just 30 km
from Hyderabad in “Rudraram village” near Patancheru. It is called Alkabir in
built nearly 400 acres of land with High security and most workers are Hindus.
The story of Al-Kabir Hyderabad Tyranny: Don’t think that these animals are
killed easily and painlessly. Their agonies start along before they are dead.
They are brought to Alkair in trucks, from far away distances for economy, 20-25
huge buffalo are stacked up in each truck. Nobody cares to feed them food, or
even water while in transit. They are packed so tightly in the truck, that they
are hurt by each other. By the time they arrive, they are no more capable of
standing on their own feet! They are moved with force of whips…
They are brought into the final ground, where at least a thousand animals are stored. This is their last open air. They are kept here for four days, hungry and thirsty. Then their legs are broken and eyes poked, so that a ‘Certificate’ can be obtained about their uselessness. The hunger and thirst of four days cause the hemoglobin to move from blood in to fat. The meat with higher hemoglobin fetches better prices.
Now these animals are pushed into washing showers. Extremely hot water (200 degrees centigrade!) is sprayed on them for five minutes, to soften their skins, so they will be easy to remove. The animal’s faints at this point, but it is not dead yet. Now it is hung upside down with one leg, on a chain-pulley conveyor. Then half of the neck is slit. This drains the blood, but does not kill the animal. After death, the skin swells thick, which sells for a poor price. But the skin of live Animals is still thin, which has better economic value. On one side the blood is dripping from the neck, and on the other side a hole is made in stomach, from which air is pumped inside. This causes the body to swell, making it easier to peel the skin. After removing the leather, the animal is cut into four pieces: head, legs, body, and tail.
The machines remove bones, and
pack small pieces of meat into cans for shipping to Alkabir’s headquarters in
Hyderabad. From there it is shipped to Mumbai for exporting to its final
destination. Working! Most of the people working here are Hindus. The Director, Subhash Sabarwal, is an NRI in
Dubai, and his brother, Satish Sabarwal, manages the
plant. The other principals are Ghulam Mohammed Sheikh (Dubai), Dilip Himmat Kothari, B.N. Raman, etc. Even though
the main workers on cutting machines are from Kerala and Muslims from Mumbai,
the administration, security, etc. consists mainly of Hindus.
There are several other equally large
(or large) plants in India, owned and operated similarly by NRI’s and Arab
citizens in cooperation. The people working here are paid very handsomely. This
is a big attraction. A monthly salary of Rs. 50,000 to 75,000 is common. At the
site, there are many veterinarians, but their job is not to save healthy live.
Their only concern is to see that the meat does not carry any germs which may
hurt the customers. In fact, there is a small army of government veterinarians,
whose job is to see that healthy and useful animals do not get butchered. But
these corrupt officials write false certificates according to wishes of
Alkabir. You cannot easily enter Alkabir, because outside people are not
allowed in there. Even the local veterinarians and police cannot go inside, so
there is no question about the other local poor people even coming close to its
boundaries…Security is tightened at nights with hunting dogs. Now the
neighboring people do not even come close to it.
SECONDLY
· Beef exports
up 44% in 4 years, India is top seller
- The Times of India
· Beef exports
up 44% in 4 years, India is top seller
- The Center's Pink Revolution to promote meat production and export has led to
a 44% increase in meat consumption and export in four years, but
it has failed to regulate...
THIRDLY
World Beef Exports: Ranking Of
Countries
· World Beef Exports:
Ranking Of Countries Four (4) countries exported more than 1.1 million metric
tons of beef in 2013: Brazil, India, Australia & the United States.
World |
9,165,000
Rank Country 2013 % Of World
1. Brazil 1,849,000 20.17%
2. India 1,765,000 19.26%
3. Australia 1,593,000 17.38%
4. United States 1,172,000 12.79%
5. New Zealand 529,000 5.77
Rank Country 2013 % Of World
1. Brazil 1,849,000 20.17%
2. India 1,765,000 19.26%
3. Australia 1,593,000 17.38%
4. United States 1,172,000 12.79%
5. New Zealand 529,000 5.77
AGAINST CRUELTY
IN INHUMAN SLAUGHTERHOUSES
"...Everyday millions of people go
to McDonalds or Kentucky Fried Chicken and enjoy a juicy hamburger or consume a
crispy, golden-fried chicken. Billions of families around the world eat meat
and share laughs together over the dinner table. But, what goes on behind the
closed doors of slaughterhouses before producers deliver perfectly packaged
meat to our grocery stores?
Employees of Kentucky Fried Chicken, one of the biggest fast-food chains of poultry, were caught in July 2004, torturing their chickens for fun. Workers were videoed stomping on chickens, kicking them, and slamming them violently against floors and walls. Workers also ripped the animals' beaks, twisted their heads off, spray-painted their faces, and squeezed the chickens' bodies until they would die.
Each year a person will consume 230 pounds of meat. Together, the world consumes 2.6 billion pounds of dairy cow a year. Eight billion animals a year are slaughtered for food. However, the conditions under which they are processed are brutal. For example, animals are supposed to have space when they are transported but instead they are packed together, not having any room to move, walk, and barely breathe. This causes many animals to become sick. Some die on the way.
In fact, half a million animals a year that arrive at slaughterhouses are either dead or in unacceptable condition for slaughter. Many of the remaining animals have broken limbs. Even these are further injured when they are unloaded.
Other forms of brutality include the "Halal method," where the animal's neck is slit in two and a half spots and, while conscious, allowed to bleed to death. A similar "method" is hanging the live, fully conscious animals upside down while their carotid arteries are cut.
Once aware of these procedures, many fast-food fans are reconsidering their diets. "It is repulsive and sick what is being committed by humans to animals in the U.S.," said Ashley Coutier, a resident of Sparta. "It should be stopped as soon as possible."
In 1960, the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act was passed, but unfortunately everyday laws are violated, and the truth needs come out. "I have heard about some of the things slaughterhouses do, but there are some things I just don't want to know and I am better off not knowing about," said Steve Snow, a sophomore at Sparta High School..."
Employees of Kentucky Fried Chicken, one of the biggest fast-food chains of poultry, were caught in July 2004, torturing their chickens for fun. Workers were videoed stomping on chickens, kicking them, and slamming them violently against floors and walls. Workers also ripped the animals' beaks, twisted their heads off, spray-painted their faces, and squeezed the chickens' bodies until they would die.
Each year a person will consume 230 pounds of meat. Together, the world consumes 2.6 billion pounds of dairy cow a year. Eight billion animals a year are slaughtered for food. However, the conditions under which they are processed are brutal. For example, animals are supposed to have space when they are transported but instead they are packed together, not having any room to move, walk, and barely breathe. This causes many animals to become sick. Some die on the way.
In fact, half a million animals a year that arrive at slaughterhouses are either dead or in unacceptable condition for slaughter. Many of the remaining animals have broken limbs. Even these are further injured when they are unloaded.
Other forms of brutality include the "Halal method," where the animal's neck is slit in two and a half spots and, while conscious, allowed to bleed to death. A similar "method" is hanging the live, fully conscious animals upside down while their carotid arteries are cut.
Once aware of these procedures, many fast-food fans are reconsidering their diets. "It is repulsive and sick what is being committed by humans to animals in the U.S.," said Ashley Coutier, a resident of Sparta. "It should be stopped as soon as possible."
In 1960, the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act was passed, but unfortunately everyday laws are violated, and the truth needs come out. "I have heard about some of the things slaughterhouses do, but there are some things I just don't want to know and I am better off not knowing about," said Steve Snow, a sophomore at Sparta High School..."
"...A wise woman named Linda McCartney once said, %u201CIf slaughterhouses had glass walls, everyone in the world would be a vegetarian%u201D.
This is one of the truest statements
ever made. If people thought about or saw what really happens to animals in
slaughterhouses for more than a second, it would get to them and they would not
be able to bring themselves to still be a carnivore. Those animals endure some
of the cruelest treatment and neglect. Also, slaughterhouses are kept in the
most unsanitary conditions and violate more laws then almost any other
business. The slaughter of animals for human consumption should be banned.
First of all, the statistics show it
would benefit land, animals%u2019 lives, and the grain and food supply if we
stopped eating meat. Each person consumes 230 pounds of animals each year.
Together we consume 2.6 billion pounds of dairy cow a year. There has been an
increase in the amount of animals we consume and how much grain it%u2019s
taking to feed them. Eight billion animals a year are slaughtered for food.
[Ed. note: In 2002 the total was ten billion.]
The breakdown of each animal that is
slaughtered is 38 million cows and calves, 95 million hogs, 5 million sheep and
goats, 278 million turkeys, 20 million ducks, and over 7 billion chickens. The
average cow should live 20 years but because they are not allowed to have a
normal life and they are just raised to be slaughtered, the average life
expectancy is 6 to 8 years, and sometimes even then the cows only live to 14
months. The amount of animals that are raised annually for slaughter is 30
times more then the total human population in the US, and more then the number
of humans in the world.
Twenty years ago livestock consumed 6%
of Mexico%u2019s grain and today they consume nearly 50%, and in Canada 77% of
their grain is used to raise livestock. If American countries alone would
reduce their meat consumption by just 10% that would save enough grain to feed
60 million people. The reality is it takes 4 acres of land to feed a meat
eater, but only 1/2 an acre or less to feed a vegetarian. On 1/2 an acre of
land 10,000lbs of apples and 20,000lbs of potatoes can be grown successfully
into food. Only 100lbs of beef can be raised on that. Over a lifetime, a
vegetarian will save 21 cows, 14 sheep, 12 hogs, and 1400 chickens from being
slaughtered. They will also save 1 acre of trees a year from being cut down.
Slaughterhouses shouldn%u2019t be
allowed to still be in operation. They have violated almost every restriction,
law, and rule that has been placed on their industry. Almost everything added
to the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act in 1960 is being violated.
It%u2019s known that no matter what the animals condition is the butcher takes
it into their own hands to make the most money possible. There are rules about
loading and unloading that are broken every second. The animals are supposed to
have space when they are transported but instead they are packed together like
sardines.
There are rules about cruelty to
animals such as no torturing or subjecting them to unnecessary pain and
suffering, and no keeping them in cages that there is not sufficient room to go
with their measurements. One of the biggest issues is that the animals are not
supposed to be exposed to their own kind getting slaughtered, but they are
constantly having to watch their own kind getting dragged mercilessly to their
brutal death. It%u2019s also against the law to slaughter animals below 6 months,
pregnant animals, sick animals, and young animals who are supplying milk. A
slaughterhouse in Texas had 22 violations during a period of 6 months. During
one of those inspections there were 9 live cattle found dangling from an
overhead chain. Yet this is how slaughterhouses operate over and over again
each day. It doesn%u2019t help that cases against them are usually not pursued
because venturing deep into slaughterhouses is not an idea liked by officials.
Transporting animals should be like transporting a human, each one having their
own space and each one being reasonably taken care of.
However, if people were treated like
the livestock while riding a bus or any other kind of transportation, many
people would be facing serious charges. Just because it is abuse to an animal
and not a human doesn%u2019t mean any less should be done about it. Animals are
packed and pressed together so close into vehicles that they can%u2019t move
and can barley breathe. A lot of times just in the process of loading the animals
they will trample each other to death and blind one another with their horns.
The law states that in that process they should have food, water, veterinary
services, and protection from natural elements (wind, rain, fire, etc.). That
is the care that any living thing should be entitled too. Those poor animals
don%u2019t ever get to see a drop of any of those things though. While getting
an animal from a distant place into the city where they are loaded, the animals
are sometimes made to run there.
No matter what the whether conditions
are. Red chili powder is put in their eyes in order to force them to run
faster. They are beaten and severely tortured just to accomplish getting them
to a destination. Sometimes the drivers of the vehicles make fast turns and
stops that causes the animals to get knocked around and injured. The animals
fall on each other which causes suffocation and more broken bones. When it
finally comes down to unloading the animals, the condition they are in is
appalling. Half a million animals a year that arrive at slaughterhouses are
dead or in unacceptable condition for slaughter. Other animals are half dead
but are still just picked up and thrown down on the concrete. Many have broken
limbs but are further injured when they are getting unloaded. The handlers
don%u2019t bother with kindness or care because they figure they are going to
face the butchers knife anyway.
While keeping the animals before
it%u2019s their time to be slaughtered they endure a series of inhumane
procedures and treatment. PETA described what they witnessed one morning at a
slaughterhouse %u201CBy 10:00 a.m. there were already more than a dozen downed
cattle. One bull kept trying to rise to his feet but could not. He struggled
before collapsing under the scorching sun, blood oozing out of his nose; his
legs and horns broken.%u201D This is one example of what someone saw, but there
are things that happen like that every day.
There is also a videotape that was
secretly set up in an Iowa pork plant that caught live hogs squealing and
kicking as they were being lowered into a tank of water. Unfortunately, there
are things that are more unbelievable then that which happen and have not been
caught on tape yet. However, even though it%u2019s not captured on tape we do
know some other things that happen in slaughterhouses. Some of the treatment
includes the use of electric prods, castration with no anesthetic, branding and
tail docking with no pain relief, and hot iron de-horning with no pain relief.
The de-horning involves pressing scorching heat onto the calves horns for a
full 30 seconds then repeating it on the other side for another 30 seconds.
Also, de-beaking with no pain relief. For that they use hot glue guns or
cigarette lighters to cut through bone, cartilage, and tissue of the birds. In
a different part of the slaughter house there may be birds that are alive and
dangling by their feet on metal hooks. Electricity stuns them as they roll on
the line for the neck blade to come down and kill them. Other handling that the
animals are subjected to is the hens are forced into a schedule that restricts
their water for 2 weeks and cows are limited to 2 milkings a day, when they are
supposed to have 6. The average life span of a hen is 16 years but with what
they endure in slaughterhouses it%u2019s shortened to 18 months. Roosters
aren%u2019t that lucky, they are gassed right away and their remains are sent
to rendering plants. Others don%u2019t get to be put out of their misery so
fast.
There are animals that have their legs
broken or hacked off so they can%u2019t run away. Some animals who are
incapacitated are left laying around for days, suffering much neglect. If
they%u2019re left laying outside long enough, a number of them freeze to death
in the winter and fry to death in the summer. Many of the animals suffer the
equivalent to that when they are dragged with chains and pushed with tractors,
causing torn ligaments and broken bones.
The way in which the animals are
slaughtered is tragic. The animals suffer copious amounts of pain and are
sometimes alive and alert when they are being slaughtered. Every animal is
supposed to be separated from others, be rendered unconscious, and then be
slaughtered. They are not supposed to be dragged by their legs, ears, and
horns. However, that usually is how it is done.
There are a few methods of slaughtering
that are practiced, and not one is humane and how it%u2019s supposed to be
done. One is decapitating the animal. Another is the Halal method where the
neck is slit in 2 1/2 spots while they are conscious and that forces them to
bleed to death. In that case the animal is alive and aware that they are
severely bleeding and they are in excruciating pain. Burying an animal%u2019s
head in the ground is not a common practice but it is still used. That way they
are suffocated to death. One of the most mortifying ways of slaughtering is
%u201Csticking a long iron rod through the anal opening, through the body, and
making it emerge through the mouth%u201D.
All the while the animal, usually a
pig, is squealing endlessly. Sometimes there is not even that much effort put
into slaughtering the animal and they will just burn them to death. Cattle are
many times stunned in the head with a steel bolt, their throats are slit, then
they are left laying around to bleed to death. The bleeding method is used when
they want the least damage to the carcass as possible. The animal is cut in a
place where they will bleed the fastest. One man that has worked in a
slaughterhouse says %u201CThey blink. They make noises. The head moves, the
eyes are wide and looking around%u201D. He watches animals die a slow and
painful death everyday when the animals are perfectly alive and conscious. He
also said, %u201CSome would survive as far as the tail cutter, the belly
ripper, and the hide puller. They die, piece by piece". Many animals do
make it as far as being skinned when they are still living and feeling pain to
the fullest.
Last of all, slaughterhouses do the
least proficient job of cleaning up after animals are killed. It would be bad
enough living near a slaughterhouse, but many neighbors say the worst thing is
not the thought. They are constantly inhaling the nauseating stench each and
every day. Neighbors also have entrails, skin, joints, and blood being dropped
onto their property. Birds of prey get a hold of the barley disposed remains,
fly away with them, then drop it on the near by people%u2019s land. There are
usually rivers of blood flowing around the slaughterhouses and sometimes make
it as far as to where the neighbors can see or smell it. The bones are boiled
on the slaughter house premise which causes them to create further pollution
and stench. The skins are sitting around outside in piles, sometimes for long
periods of time, waiting for the tanneries to come pick them up. In unsanitary
towns the carcasses are transported around with out being frozen. The water
flowing through slaughterhouses go through treatment tanks like public sewers
and then they end up spilling into creeks and rivers, generating more pollution.
A number of slaughter houses have been ordered to add more washers and thorouly
clean up. The evidence shows that many have not followed that order because the
swelling of the rivers have not gone down yet.
Slaughterhouses have no right to be
doing what they are doing. They perform every operation illegally. They
don%u2019t give the animals food, water, shelter, veterinary services, or
humane treatment. There is a pile of violations on them and yet they still
continue to break more laws. Then on top of that they cause pollution and a
disturbance to their surrounding neighbors. For some reason they think that in
their industry they are allowed to make their own rules and do business however
they please.
We need to show them that that%u2019s
not allowed by shutting them down right away.
SOLUTIONS WE REQUIRE (THESE OR BETTER):
"First, rules must be clear so that enforcement is not an inherently subjective process prone to mistakes and abuse. In particular, the downer loophole must be closed. ...The current flawed rule depends on plant workers summoning a USDA inspector back to reevaluate an animal who becomes nonambulatory after initial inspection, in order for the inspector to decide if the animal can be slaughtered, a system that seems bound to fail given the enormous pressure plant workers are under by their company superiors to move the maximum number of animals quickly to slaughter. This system creates financial incentives for precisely those abuses that we witnessed in the undercover footage....
"For
the animals, removing current incentives that encourage workers to try every
cruel tactic imaginable to move downers to the kill box would alleviate
suffering. If crippled animals cannot be sold for food, slaughter plants have
no reason to prolong their misery to try to get them through the slaughter
process."
Temple
Grandin, Professor, Colorado State University and author of Animals in Translation, testified,
" I have worked for over 30 years to improve the treatment of
animals at slaughter plants. Half the cattle and 25% of the pigs are handled in
facilities I have designed. ...The recent video of dairy cows being tortured
with a forklift made me sick. The abuse of cattle at this plant was 100% caused
by a lack of employee supervision and a complete failure of the USDA
inspectors. The Humane Slaughter Act prohibits dragging of crippled animals,
and it was not enforced.....
"[M]any of the ... regulations are
vague and subject to different interpretations. Inspectors need better training
and clear directives to improve consistency. It is impossible for different
inspectors to be consistent when vague terminology is used such as
%u2018unnecessary pain and suffering.'"
Grandin explained, "The present system of USDA inspection is like
having traffic police giving out speeding tickets when they think cars are
speeding. Police departments are able to enforce the speed limits in a uniform
manner because the officer MEASURES a car's speed with radar. The decision to
pull a car over is based on a measurement, not subjective judgment of speed.
For other traffic rules such as being in the wrong lane, the rules are very
clearly written so that the officers will interpret them the same way."
Grandin recommended clear bans on
certain practices. She further recommended "animal
based outcome standards [measured with] numerical scoring. For example, the
percentage of animals that fall during handling can be caused by either a slick
floor or rough handling by people. Falling is an outcome of bad equipment,
poorly trained people, or very weak cows that should have never been brought to
the plant. Measuring the percentage of cows that fall at a plant is a sensitive
indicator of three different types of problems [which can then be corrected].
The percentage of cattle falling can never be zero, so falling cannot be
banned, but it should be kept at a very low level."
Grandin developed a numerical scoring
system during a survey in 1996 of slaughter plants.
Grandin concluded, "I recommend that the USDA adopt numerical scoring
to make enforcement of the Humane Slaughter Act more uniform and to uphold
higher standards. Many progressive inspectors are already informally using it.
For the practices that are prohibited, a handbook of very clear guidelines is
needed for enforcement. It would list prohibited practices where there is a
zero tolerance."
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Brussels - The European Commission on
Thursday called for new rules aimed at reducing animal suffering in Europe's
butcheries.
Under the proposals, slaughterhouses
should appoint a trained staffer responsible for ensuring that animals are
being treated humanely.
Such a person would, among other
things, have to ensure that animals which are stunned do not regain
consciousness before they are slaughtered.
Manufacturers of stunning equipment
would have to provide detailed instructions on how to stun animals, while
European governments would have to create research centres tasked with
assisting official inspectors.
"As a society we have a duty of
care to animals, which includes minimising distress and avoiding pain
throughout the slaughtering process," said EU Health Commissioner
Androulla Vassiliou.
Vassiliou's proposals, which are not
likely to be approved by EU governments until next year, were welcomed by
animal-rights groups.
"These proposals are a step in the
right direction and will benefit millions of animals," said Sonja Van
Tichelen of Eurogroup for Animals, a pressure group.
"It is unacceptable in a civilised
society that animals have to suffer in their final moments. So much of their
suffering can be avoided or decreased by having well-trained staff and by using
appropriate stunning techniques," Van Tichelen said.
Groups representing meat traders and
slaughterhouses said they still needed to study the proposals to find out
whether such measures would result in higher production costs.
"A good cost-benefit analysis is
necessary. Generally speaking we cannot be against measures that aim at
protecting animals," said Jean-Luc Meriaux of the European Livestock and
Meat Trading Union.
Officials in Brussels note that smaller
slaughterhouses may be exempted from the new rules.
Nearly 360 million pigs, sheep, goats
and cattle, as well as several billion poultry, are killed in EU
slaughterhouses each year.
A further 25 million animals are
slaughtered by the fur industry, according to commission figures.
To ensure fair competition, the
commission's proposals would also apply to non-EU producers who export their
products to member states. (dpa)
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EU wants welfare officers in
slaughterhouses
Slaughterhouses throughout the EU could
be obliged to appoint special officers for animal welfare who are to ensure
that pigs, sheep, goats, cattle and poultry are humanely treated at the time of
their killing, according to European Commission proposals unveiled on Thursday
(18 October).
If approved by all 27 member states,
the European Commission's proposal will "integrate welfare considerations
into the design of slaughterhouses," requiring the killing techniques to
be constantly monitored.
A cow restrained for stunning ahead of
slaughter
Abattoirs will have to appoint a
specific person responsible for animal welfare and ensure that their staff are
properly trained and certified, although. Small slaughterhouses will be exempt
from this requirement.
Every year, nearly 360 million pigs,
sheep, goats and cattle as well as several billion chickens are killed in EU
slaughterhouses for their meat. The EC proposal will also apply to the about 25
million animals killed for their fur.
"As a society we have a duty of
care towards animals, which includes minimising distress and avoiding pain
throughout the slaughtering process," EU health commissioner Androulla
Vassiliou said.
"The current EU rules are outdated
and need revision. This proposal will make a real difference to the way animals
are treated at the time of slaughter, as well as promoting innovation and
providing a level playing field for operators," she added.
Animal rights groups hailed the
commission proposal.
Eurogroup for Animals spokesperson Steven
Blaakman told EUobserver: "The commission made no mention of religious
slaughter," pointing out that some countries such as France allow
exceptions on religious grounds from having to stun an animal before it is
killed. "There, a large amount of sheep meat comes from animals killed via
religious slaughter," Mr Blaakman said, while Sweden permits no exceptions
on religious grounds.
Enforcing the regulations in the new
member states may be difficult however. Romania maintains a strong tradition of
slaughtering pigs for Christmas in one's own back yard instead of at
slaughterhouses.
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