Is ‘slaughter-free dairy’ really possible?
The short answer is no - especially not in the name of animal rights.
Posted 21 Nov 2024
Posted on the 3rd March 2015
Just one week before the much-hyped Cheltenham Festival, a new Animal Aid report reveals that equine fatalities at the Gloucestershire course occurred so regularly during 2014 that there was a 50 per cent chance of a horse dying at any day’s racing at the venue.
In all, eight horses perished in just 16 days of racing – a dismal record matched only by Wetherby in West Yorkshire, where nine horses died in 18 days.
The figures are drawn from Animal Aid’s online database, Race Horse Deathwatch. A total of 160 equine fatalities were recorded in 2014, 29 more than in 2013. But the true death totals are very likely to be much higher. While racing’s regulator, the British Horseracing Authority (BHA), refuses to make public the names of individual horses killed and the racecourses on which they died, it did respond in May 2013 to a Parliamentary Question by revealing the on-course fatality figures for the three years 2010 – 2012. Collectively, they were around 30 per cent higher than Animal Aid was able to collate and publish on Deathwatch.
Among key findings from the new Deathwatch analysis, relating to 2014, are:
Says Animal Aid Director Andrew Tyler:
‘British racing often claims that it is among the best-regulated animal activities, with a strong welfare ethic. Yet it pitches horses into a “sport” in which there is a high risk of serious injury and death. At an average jump racecourse, the chances of a fatality on any given day’s racing is nearly 20 per cent. On some courses, it is more than twice that rate. Little wonder that at least 160 horses lost their lives on British racecourses in 2014 – and the true total is almost certainly much higher. Routinely subjecting horses to such predictable and avoidable harm is outrageous. The main animal protection legislation, the Animal Welfare Act 2006, demands that those responsible for animals take steps to ensure that they are “protected from pain, suffering [and] injury”. This is clearly not happening.’
The short answer is no - especially not in the name of animal rights.
Posted 21 Nov 2024
Animal Aid have just launched their very own children’s book – Rollo’s Long Way Home. This beautifully illustrated book tells the story of a young reindeer called Rollo who is fed up with his life...
Posted 19 Nov 2024