FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
CFIA Fails
Again at Enforcing Regulations for Live Horse Exports to
Japan
October 18, 2012,
Calgary, AB - Footage taken of Alberta horses being shipped live to Japan for
slaughter shows that the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) is violating
their own standards set forth in the Health of Animals Regulations.
The Regulations prohibit the transportation of all
animals under conditions that would expose the animals to undue injury or
suffering.
The 2012
footage shows horses in a feedlot being loaded with electric prods into
transport trucks, transported to the Calgary International Airport and being
crated in wooden crates so small they cannot stand in their natural position, in
violation of Section 142 of the Health of Animals Regulations
(“No
person shall transport or cause to be transported animals in a railway car,
motor vehicle, aircraft or vessel unless each animal is able to stand in its
natural position without coming into contact with a
deck or roof.”) Some horses were even being crated together, even though it is
in violation of Section 141.8 of the Health of Animals Regulations,
which states that horses over 14 hands high need to be segregated for air
transport.
Canadian draft horses
from various producers are routinely live shipped to Japan for slaughter from
the Calgary and Winnipeg International Airports. On arrival in Japan, horses are
transported to a feedlot; once they reach desired weight they are slaughtered
for horse sashimi, which is considered to be a delicacy in Japan. The meat must
be eaten within three days because it is highly perishable; according to the
2008 Alberta Horse Welfare Report, each Canadian horse is worth approximately
$20,000.
“Footage shows large
horses overcrowded (not segregated) into wooden transport crates, often unable
to stand in their natural position for a long journey to Japan, in clear violation of two of the CFIA's own regulations”, says Sinikka
Crosland, executive director with the Canadian Horse Defence Coalition. These
transport conditions not only are inhumane but also are likely to lead to
injuries and potential deaths during transport.
“Once again we see
CFIA turn a blind eye and choose to protect industry profits rather than do
their job”, says Crosland. “The
CFIA's mandate is both to
protect human health and monitor animal welfare. We recently have seen them fail
to protect the public from contaminated meat and now we have clear evidence of
them failing to follow their own regulations when it comes to the live transport
of horses for meat.”
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For further
information, please contact: Sinikka Crosland, Executive Director, Canadian
Horse Defence Coalition. Tel: 250-681-1408
To see the footage of
Alberta horses being shipped live to Japan: http://www.youtube.com/user/defendhorsescanada
To learn more about
the Canadian Horse Defence Coalition: http://defendhorsescanada.org
1 comment:
Will this halocaust ever end for the Horses... :(
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