When a compassionate Auckland woman noticed heifers (female calves) grazing at an organic fruit and vegetable farm, she asked what their destiny would be.

Sadly they would face the same torturous lifestyle as other “dairy” cows who are forcefully impregnated every year, have their newborn calves wrenched from them annually and are exploited for their milk until they are slaughtered for hamburger meat at an early age.

These beautiful heifers are almost 11-months-old, will eat from a human hand and need havens where they can live out their natural life-spans of up to 25 years without being exploited as milk or breeding machines or slaughtered for their flesh or skins.

If you know of a sincere soul in the North Island who will allow any of these creatures to simply be appreciated for their beauty and gentle natures, please contact me immediately. The farmer is planning to sell them on Trade Me so time is of the essence…

Animal Re-Homing

 

Please visit Your Petition.co.nz and sign this online petition, which already has about two thousand signatures collected manually last year, and is is now online.  Please disseminate as wide as you can so we can create an impact when the Bill is debated in parliament.  Please note that this is not Sue Kedgley’s proposed Bill but was drawn up last year after the Animal Rights conference.

 

Please support SAFE’s campaign to stop religious slaughter of animals. Act now – this is an urgent matter causing great suffering, and it’s happening right here.

Despite a recent law change making it illegal to slaughter animals without pre-stunning, animals in New Zealand will continue to have their throats slit without first being rendered unconscious.

Despite a recent law change making it illegal to slaughter animals without pre-stunning, animals in New Zealand will continue to have their throats slit without first being rendered unconscious.

http://safe.org.nz/Campaigns/Religious-slaughter/

 

Open Rescue member John Darroch will be appearing in the Hamilton District next week facing charges relating to an act of civil disobedience earlier this year. Please come along and show your opposition to pig farming in New Zealand. John is facing one charge of tresspass and another of unlawfully being inside a building for a protest where he locked onto a silo near Cambridge. This followed an investigation into pig farming which revealed shocking conditions in Waikato pig farms.

Open Rescue and supporters will be holding a protest outside court to draw attention to the cruel nature of pig farming in New Zealand. The rally before court will start at 8.30 and continue until ten. Supporters are welcome to stay and watch the trial after this.

If anyone wishes to come from Auckland and requires a ride please contact J Darroch

Thursday 19th August

Hamilton District Court – 116 Anglesea St Hamilton

For more information about Open Rescue and for information about recent investigations visit http://www.nzopenrescue.org.nz/

New Zealand Open Rescue

PO Box 37612 Parnell,

Auckland,

New Zealand

 

The Code of Welfare for Layers Hens will be reviewed later this year. Government and the egg industry won’t make positive changes for hens by themselves. Consistent pressure from the public is the key to creating change. That means you!

Do you think battery cages should be banned?

Go to our website and participate in our online POLL to make your voice heard!

New Zealand Open Rescue
PO Box 37612
Parnell, Auckland, New Zealand
www.nzopenrescue.org.nz

 
Free range egg production – not all it’s cracked up to be
Recently New Zealand Open Rescue inspected a Free Range egg production facility located in the lower North Island. This facility was a small scale commercial operation but we were shocked at what we uncovered. From the outside, the facility looked like a typical battery hen unit; ominous, industrial scale warehouse sheds with large feed silos. Inside the units, things looked quite different but the callous treatment of animals as mere units of production was exactly the same as on any other type of factory farm.
Several thousand egg laying hens were crammed inside the sheds which were sectioned in half. The hens were panicked and hysterical, terrified of humans. As we moved slowly through the crowds of hens documenting their living conditions, we noticed several of them suffered from prolapses and many had rubbed red raw skin. All the hens in this facility were de-beaked.  Free Range hens are still often de-beaked as living in flocks of several thousand is highly un-natural. Hens can’t find any sort of meaningful social order in such large flocks, so fighting is constant in order to establish hierarchy.
Following our visit to this facility, we were shocked to learn that there are no regulations around how often supposed ‘Free Range’ hens are meant to be allowed access to the outdoors. A local in the area told us that they had seen the hens at the facility we visited outside only once in over a year!  We felt that the many people who purchase Free Range eggs in good faith that conditions for animals are better in this type of production system, would be shocked if they had seen what we witnessed. The idyllic scene of happy Free Range hens scratching in the earth and basking in the sunshine that comes to mind when people purchase Free Range eggs was certainly not what we experienced during our investigation at this typical Free Range facility.
View photographs from our investigation here
New Zealand Open Rescue
PO Box 37612
Parnell, Auckland, New Zealand
http://www.nzopenrescue.org.nz

Recently New Zealand Open Rescue inspected a Free Range egg production facility located in the lower North Island. This facility was a small scale commercial operation but we were shocked at what we uncovered. From the outside, the facility looked like a typical battery hen unit; ominous, industrial scale warehouse sheds with large feed silos. Inside the units, things looked quite different but the callous treatment of animals as mere units of production was exactly the same as on any other type of factory farm.

Several thousand egg laying hens were crammed inside the sheds which were sectioned in half. The hens were panicked and hysterical, terrified of humans. As we moved slowly through the crowds of hens documenting their living conditions, we noticed several of them suffered from prolapses and many had rubbed red raw skin. All the hens in this facility were de-beaked.  Free Range hens are still often de-beaked as living in flocks of several thousand is highly un-natural. Hens can’t find any sort of meaningful social order in such large flocks, so fighting is constant in order to establish hierarchy.

Following our visit to this facility, we were shocked to learn that there are no regulations around how often supposed ‘Free Range’ hens are meant to be allowed access to the outdoors. A local in the area told us that they had seen the hens at the facility we visited outside only once in over a year!  We felt that the many people who purchase Free Range eggs in good faith that conditions for animals are better in this type of production system, would be shocked if they had seen what we witnessed. The idyllic scene of happy Free Range hens scratching in the earth and basking in the sunshine that comes to mind when people purchase Free Range eggs was certainly not what we experienced during our investigation at this typical Free Range facility.

View photographs from our investigation here

New Zealand Open Rescue
PO Box 37612
Parnell, Auckland, New Zealand

 
MPs CALLED TO SUPPORT NEW WELFARE BILL
Animal advocates from SAFE welcome the animal welfare bill drawn from the ballot at Parliament yesterday and say the bill could improve conditions for millions of farmed animals.
The Animal Welfare Amendment bill, as proposed by Green Party MP Sue Kedgley, would close a loophole in the Animal Welfare Act 1999 (AWA) that currently permits battery hens and crated sows to live in horrific conditions that breach the legal obligations of the AWA.
“The Green Party bill has the power to help over 20,000 crated sows and nearly three million caged hens. These animals are currently denied the opportunity to express their normal patterns of behaviour such as walking, foraging, nest building and mothering their young. Section 10 of the AWA stipulates that animals must be able to express their normal behaviour and the proposed bill will ensure this actually happens,” says SAFE campaign director Hans Kriek.
“Ms Kedgley’s animal welfare bill will see any practice that does not meet the obligations of the AWA phased out within five years. This will greatly improve the welfare of animals in New Zealand,” says Mr Kriek.
SAFE is calling on all New Zealand MPs to uphold the legislative process by supporting the bill.
“We expect widespread support for the bill as many MPs have already expressed concern about the cruelty of factory-farmed pigs and layer hens,” says Mr Kriek. “Now these MPs have the perfect opportunity to back up their words with action.”
“This bill has been drawn at a very opportune time. The public are outraged at the animal suffering on factory farms that they have seen exposed in the New Zealand media recently. SAFE believes the bill will receive widespread public support and hopes that the cruel systems used on factory farms will finally be banned,” says Mr Kriek.
For more information contact Hans Kriek on 027 446 2711.

Animal advocates from SAFE welcome the animal welfare bill drawn from the ballot at Parliament yesterday and say the bill could improve conditions for millions of farmed animals.

The Animal Welfare Amendment bill, as proposed by Green Party MP Sue Kedgley, would close a loophole in the Animal Welfare Act 1999 (AWA) that currently permits battery hens and crated sows to live in horrific conditions that breach the legal obligations of the AWA.

“The Green Party bill has the power to help over 20,000 crated sows and nearly three million caged hens. These animals are currently denied the opportunity to express their normal patterns of behaviour such as walking, foraging, nest building and mothering their young. Section 10 of the AWA stipulates that animals must be able to express their normal behaviour and the proposed bill will ensure this actually happens,” says SAFE campaign director Hans Kriek.

“Ms Kedgley’s animal welfare bill will see any practice that does not meet the obligations of the AWA phased out within five years. This will greatly improve the welfare of animals in New Zealand,” says Mr Kriek.

SAFE is calling on all New Zealand MPs to uphold the legislative process by supporting the bill.

“We expect widespread support for the bill as many MPs have already expressed concern about the cruelty of factory-farmed pigs and layer hens,” says Mr Kriek. “Now these MPs have the perfect opportunity to back up their words with action.”

“This bill has been drawn at a very opportune time. The public are outraged at the animal suffering on factory farms that they have seen exposed in the New Zealand media recently. SAFE believes the bill will receive widespread public support and hopes that the cruel systems used on factory farms will finally be banned,” says Mr Kriek.

For more information contact Hans Kriek on 027 446 2711.

 

Campaign for the Abolition of Cruel Sports

July 21st 2010
Lower Coyne Street,
Callan,
Co. Kilkenny,
Ireland

Dear Friends,

Following the recent historic ban on carted stag hunting in Ireland, campaigners against blood sports are hopeful that the Irish government will follow up this achievement by banning the horrific practise of live hare coursing, in which hares are used as live bait in contests between competing greyhounds.

Here is a link to a film of what hare coursing in Ireland involves:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFdjBy5S8k8

Thousands of hares are captured annually in Ireland for this “pastime”…to be chased and terrorised in wired enclosures for “fun” and “entertainment”. Many are mauled to death; others die of stress-related ailments or internal injuries after being released back into the wild following the coursing events.

Other hares, mainly the ones deemed unsuitable for coursing, are used to “blood” dogs as part of their training. This involves feeding them live to greyhounds. The greyhounds also suffer injury, ill-treatment, and neglect in coursing.

A decision will be made by the Irish government shortly (at some point before the end of August) on whether to permit yet another season of this barbaric blood sport. The hare-coursing season itself, if allowed to go ahead, would begin in the final week of September.

The Irish government is sensitive to outside opinion as tourism is one of our most lucrative industries, so messages from abroad can influence the decision.

Can you congratulate Ireland’s Environment Minister John Gormley on his achievement in banning carted stag hunting…a brief message will suffice…And ask him to now consider banning live hare coursing in Ireland?

You can contact him at: minister@environ.ie

Thanking you,
John Fitzgerald,

Campaign for the Abolition Of Cruel Sports

 

For years, PCRM worked to end the use of live pigs in medical student training at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. But we just learned that the school has replaced its use of animals! Your calls and e-mails to the school helped make this victory happen.

We now need your help to end animal use at Wisconsin’s other medical school—the Medical College of Wisconsin (MCW). Please ask MCW dean and executive vice president Jonathan Ravdin, M.D., to replace the school’s use of rabbits, frogs, and rats.

One of the last holdouts among United States medical schools, the University of Wisconsin (UW) now joins the overwhelming majority of institutions that no longer use live animals to teach future physicians. During the first year physiology course at UW, medical students used to participate in laboratory sessions during which procedures were practiced on live pigs before the animals were bled out and killed.

Earlier this year, MCW also eliminated its pig lab, but MCW is still using live frogs, rats, and rabbits. Please e-mail Dr. Ravdin and ask him to end this animal use too. Ninety-five percent of U.S. medical schools have already ended their live animal laboratories. With your help MCW will be the next school to completely replace animal use in its curriculum.

Thank you for all of your help.

Best regards,
Senior Medical and Research Adviser John J. Pippin, MD, FACC

John J. Pippin, M.D., F.A.C.C.
Senior Medical and Research Adviser

 

A striking new advertising campaign launched today by national animal advocacy organisation SAFE seeks to warn consumers about a planned ‘100% New Zealand Welfare Approved Pork’ label. The ‘Don’t be fooled’ consumer campaign will be SAFE’s largest ever, and will consist of billboards, posters and a series of radio advertisements.

The ‘Don’t be fooled’ campaign, launched on the eve of the New Zealand Pork Board’s 2010 national conference, will directly challenge the New Zealand Pork Industry Board’s proposed ‘Welfare Approved’ pork labelling scheme. SAFE says the misleading labels will be available to any farm that passes an audit based on the current pig welfare code and, indeed, to the very same farms that caused consumer outrage in 2009 after their facilities were shown on television.

“SAFE says the standards for the pig welfare audit are so low that farmers who use cruel sow stalls or farrowing crates will be able to call their pork ‘Welfare-Approved’. It is outrageous that the pig industry has the audacity to label pork produced from factory-farmed pigs ‘welfare-approved’, given that research shows that crated pigs suffer, and consumers oppose these cruel farming methods,” says SAFE campaign director Hans Kriek.

SAFE also challenges pork industry comments that pork sold in supermarkets does not come from sows kept in stalls.

“These comments are designed to fool consumers into believing that sow crates are not used in the production of pork. The truth is that over half the pork on supermarket shelves comes from pigs born to mothers confined in sow stalls and farrowing crates. These pigs spend their first four weeks inside the crates with their mothers and most continue to be factory farmed until they are slaughtered, and will never see a grassy field or feel the sun on their backs,” says Mr Kriek.

ACTION TODAY
SAFE will launch its ‘Don’t be fooled’ campaign outside the Willis Street New World supermarket in Wellington at 12.30pm today. Lucy, the 2.5-metre high ‘super-pig’, will be on hand to warn consumers about falsely labelled pork.

For more information contact Hans Kriek on 027 446 2711.

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