Posts Tagged ‘farm animals’

Sign of the times? Farmer gets ten-year animal ban

Friday, March 19th, 2010

A Stirlingshire farmer has been banned from keeping livestock until 2020 after 12 cows were discovered dead and chained together in a barn. Falkirk Sheriff court heard that another eight cattle were found barely alive, with no food, on 59-year-old Alan Reid’s farm near Bonnybridge. The court heard that one animal had a horn which had grown into its head because Reid had failed to get a vet. Reid, who admitted two charges, was also given 160 hours community service.

He claimed he had been overwhelmed by months of bad weather and had “nowhere to put” his animals’ excrement.

Source: BBC News

Anna Claxton

Buying British? Make sure you are!

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

British food companies are selling products that contain meat from foreign countries, but labeling them “British” or “traditional”, according to research done by the British newspaper The Independent. Supermarkets such as Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury’s, Waitrose and the Co-op sell some processed meals with ingredients sourced from overseas in a way that has raised complaints with customers due to potential animal welfare concerns.

A shepherd’s pie sold by Sainsbury’s, as part of its British Classics range with a Union Jack on the packaging, is made with lamb from New Zealand, along with Marks & Spencer’s “traditional favourite” shepherd’s pie. Still, at least the meat’s country of origin is listed somewhere on the packaging – unlike Birds Eye’s chicken dinner meal from its “British Traditional” range. The product carries a picture of rolling green fields reminiscent of the English countryside, but is made in a factory in the Republic of Ireland and contains intensively produced chicken from Thailand, says the report. Birds Eye changed the product’s name from “Great British Menu” at the start of the year after complaints from members of the public. In small print on the back, the pack states the chicken comes from abroad but does not state its country of origin.

Rob Ward, founder of the Honest Food Labeling Campaign, said according to the Food Standards Agency, a food company cannot portray a product using words or images that misrepresent the food, so if they are using a scene of rolling countryside then that should imply those ingredients are from that scene.

Sainsbury’s insisted its labeling was “clear and transparent”.

Source: Meat International

Know your labels! Follow Compassion in World Farmings guide to good welfare eating here.

Anna Claxton

Aussie farmers lend support to end live animal exports

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

The Australian meatworkers union has formed an unlikely alliance with animal welfare activists opposing the live export trade. The Australian Meat Industry Employees Union said live exports were crippling the meat processing industry and costing jobs in regional Australia at a joint press conference with the World Society for the Protection of Animals held this morning.

WSPA’s program manager Emily Reeves said the Federal Government should halt the live export trade for both economic and animal welfare reasons. Despite recent federal government attempts to improve animal welfare in export countries, she said a recent investigation in the Middle East had gathered video footage showing that cruelty and mishandling of Australian animals continued.

“We’ve got the economic data to show live export is bad business, we’ve got a rural industry crippled through poorly thought-out Government policy and we’ve got yet more proof that Australian animals are being handled and slaughtered in a way that would horrify Australians,” Ms Reeves said.

Source: The Age

Anna Claxton

Find out more about Australian animal exports here. WARNING: this website contains images and footage that may cause distress.