Savoir

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

PARIS––An estimated 130,000 to
150,000 French hunters mobbed Paris on
Valentine’s Day to protest a European Union
directive that France must protect migratory
birds. Headed by leaders of both the
Communist Party and the far-right National
Front, the hunters repeatedly hanged French
environment minister and Green Party member
Dominique Voynet in effigy.
“Men with whips drove forward a
pack of dogs and a wild pig at the head of the
parade,” Jean-Marie Godard reported for
Associated Press. “The marchers sounded
hunting horns and tossed firecrackers the
length of the protest route.”

Read more

Merry Olde England

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

LONDON––With a bill to ban fox hunting approved by
Parliament 411-151 on first vote back on November 28, 1997, but
apparently unlikely to advance due to partisan maneuvering, both cornered
defenders of the status quo and some frustrated activists have
turned from debating the issues to merely trying to muzzle each other.
The Royal SPCA for the second straight spring is fighting a
takeover push led by the British Field Sports Society and Country
Sports Animal Welfare Group, who claimed last year that they had
encouraged about 3,000 hunters to join, in hopes of dismantling
RSPCA opposition to hunting. The British Charities Commission has
advised the RSPCA that it cannot exclude hunters from purchasing voting
membership. Members must join by January 31 each year to be
able to vote at the May annual meeting.
The Charities Commission in 1996 forced the RSPCA to
withdraw two policy statements of opposition to animal use in biomedical
research, and this year forced it to drop a Declaration on Animal
Rights which had been official policy since 1977.
“Inasmuch as there is ample evidence that many animal
species are capable of feeling,” the declaration said, “we condemn
totally the infliction of suffering upon our fellow creatures and the curtailment
of their behavioral and other needs save where this is necessary
for their own individual benefit. We do not accept that a difference
in species alone (any more than a difference in race) can justify
wanton exploitation or oppression in the name of science or sport, or
for use as food, for commercial profit, or for other human gain.”
Replacing those words in the 1998 RSPCA policy pamphlet
are these: “Readers should be aware of the contstraints placed by current
charity law on all animal welfare charities. They cannot pursue
policies which, while benefiting animals, would have a detrimental
effect on humankind. Further, they cannot oppose uses of animals for
which there are no alternatives but which may cause pain, suffering or
distress, and where there is an overriding benefit to humans. All policy
statements which follow should be read in that context.”

The War At Sea
The Whale & Dolphin Conservation Society, one of the most
prominent British marine mammal protection organizations, was
meanwhile rapped on January 21 by the Advertising Standard
Authority, which acted in response to a complaint by John Dineley.
Describing himself as “a consultant in animal behavior and
welfare,” Dineley is described by WDCS director of campaigns Chris
Stroud as “an active member of the International Marine Animal
Trainers Association, specifically serving as regional subcommittee
chair for the Legislation, Information, and Policies Committee.”
In 1992 Dineley complained to the Broadcasting Complaints
Commission about alleged inaccuracies in Into The Blue, a documentary
about the September 1991 release of the dolphins Rocky, Missie,
and Silver off the Turks and Caicos Islands by a consortium of animal
protection organizations including the Born Free Foundation, Bellerive
Foundation, and the World Society for the Protection of Animals.
Each had spent about 20 years in captivity: Rocky at Marineland of
Morecambe in northern England, Missie and Silver at the Brighton
Aquarium in southern England. None are known to have survived their
release for even as long as a month. The BCC agreed with Dineley on
six of 12 points.
This time Dineley complained about a WDCS newspaper ad
“aimed,” it said, “to stop the capture and use of orca whales in marine
parks around the world.” Further text added, “Despite countless
protests, 52 killer whales are still being held captive throughout the
world for so-called entertainment purposes.”
The ASA agreed that the ad misleadingly implied that “donations
would fund a new killer whale release project,” and that “the
advertisement implied wrongly that all 52 killer whales in captivity

around the world were kept only for entertainment
purposes.”
Blakemore beseiged

The skirmishing turned violent––
again––when British Association for the
Advancement of Science president Colin
Blakemore was attacked by two women at a
lecture in London during the second week of
January. The women broke glass vases on the
stage and hit Blakemore with a chair.
A week later, while Blakemore was
at work, a masked mob of about 20 people
attacked his home with bricks and bottles,
terrorizing his wife, his 83-year-old motherin-law,
and a visiting professor.
“They smashed all the windows on
the ground floor and some on first floor,”
Blakemore told Michael Fleet of the London
Daily Telegraph. They also vandalized the
visiting professor’s car.
As many as 200 people stormed the
Blakemore home on a previous occasion.
Two of Blakemore’s children unwittingly
took delivery of a shrapnel bomb disguised as
a Christmas gift in 1993. The bomb was discovered
before it could detonate.
An Oxford University physiologist,
Blakemore came to public notice in 1972 for
sewing shut the eyes of kittens and monkeys.
Today, he says, he works mainly with tissue
samples, but he remains a prominent defender
of vivisection. In 1996 Blakemore almost
simultaneously formed the European Dana
Alliance for the Brain, to lobby European
governments for research funding, and joined
wildlife rehabilitator Les Ward of Advocates
for Animals and the Rev. Kenneth Boyd,
director of the Institute of Medical Ethics at
Edinburgh University, to form the Boyd
Group, whose goal is to promote discussion
of animal rights issues in a civil atmosphere.

U.K. vegan infant death case

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

SHEFFIELD, U.K.– – David
Low, 37, of Wortley, England, was
acquitted of cruelty to a child on February
6 when Sheffield Crown Court Judge
Michael Walker ruled that Low “is a gentle
and caring man,” and directed the jury
to declare him not guilty of causing the
October 1995 death of his son Ki Beau,
age four months, by placing the child on a
diet of soy milk and black currant juice.
Walker noted that Ki Beau suffered
from a virus often associated with
crib death. Prosecutor Jeremy Baker
brought the cruelty charge rather than a
manslaughter charge, he told the court,
because he could not actually establish
that the vegan diet caused the death.

Read more

Butchers, pig poop, & truth in advertising

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1998:

The Confederation Francaise de la
Boucherie, a Paris-based 22,000-member
union of butchers, objects to “massacres,
shootings, and throat-cuttings which crop up
in the news described as butchery,” such as
the Ramadan killings of more than 400
women and children in Algeria. A butcher’s
role, the butchers claimed, “evokes peace
and fraternity. He is not an executioner or a
torturer. He is an artisan, in love with his
trade.” Alleged Islamic militants used almost
the same killing methods on the Ramadan victims––and
thousands of others since 1992––as
are used to kill sheep at Ramadan, an Islamic
festival, for fast-ending meals.

Read more

Bombings in Quebec, a grand jury in Pennsylvania, convictions in U.K., Utah

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1998:

Le Journal de Quebec, of Quebec
City, received an anonymous call on
November 26 from a man claiming to represent
the previously unknown Quebec City cell
of the Animal Liberation Front, who said he
was calling on behalf of the also previously
unknown Montreal ALF to claim responsibility
for two bombs that earlier in the day damaged
both the Laval head office of BioChem
Pharma Inc. and a third bomb that damaged a
BioChem diagnostic lab in Montreal. Quebec
activists told ANIMAL PEOPLE it was a
“bad rap” against the cause, while animal
rights groups that often receive ALF communiques
said they had not received any about
the Quebec cases. Most denounced the bombings,
which came in mid-morning when both
buildings were fully occupied. BioChem,
spun off from the Institute Armand Frappier
at Laval University, uses mice and rats in
pharmaceutical product testing. The Institute
Armand Frappier primate research compound
is next door to the BioChem offices. BioChem
got warnings that the bombs had been
placed at 9:52 a.m., just in time to evacuate
200 people in Laval and 55 in Montreal.

Read more

The Brown Dog riots

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1998:

LONDON––February 1998 marks
the 95th anniversary of the 1903 events that
touched off the Brown Dog Riots, in
Battersea, England, four years later.
According to historian Peter
Mason, the Brown Dog was a stray who
was repeatedly used in demonstration
surgery, without anesthetic, to show 70
medical students at University College,
London, the workings of the pancreatic and
salivary glands.
The repeated use violated the 1876
Cruelty to Animals Act. The Society for
United Prayer for the Prevention of Cruelty
to Animals raised funds to erect a commemorative
drinking fountain, as an enduring
form of public protest. A plaque on the
fountain, beneath a statue of the dog,
memorialized not only the Brown Dog but
also 232 other dogs killed in similar
University College dissections during 1902.

Read more

White House kills EU fur ban

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1998:

BRUSSELS––Hope that the European Union would finally enforce
a ban promised since 1991 on imports of furs possibly taken by leghold trapping
died on December 1, 1997, when 12 hours after the EU threatened to
impose the ban against U.S. wild-caught furs within a week, it accepted a
non-binding deal that allows continued imports of leghold-trapped furs for at
least six more years while individual states set their own schedules for phasing
out or modifying leghold traps to meet so-called international standards developed
by the trapping industry.
The USDA is meanwhile spending $350,000 this year in experiments
to develop alternative trapping methods. Largely replicative of work
done in Canada for nearly 40 years without finding anything acceptable to
both trappers and humanitarians, the experiments call for trapping at least 186
foxes, 186 coyotes, and 1,080 raccoons.

Read more

Biotech head-trips

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1997:

LONDON––British journals and
news media in late October and early
November 1997 disclosed either the promises
of eternal life and meat without suffering,
or the separation of soul from body by latterday
Dr. Frankensteins––or maybe all three at
once, some commentators ventured.
But as Halloween came and went,
announcements of successful headless
cloning experiments and behavior-changing
brain tissue transplants generated surprisingly
little of the excitement that accompanied the
February 23 announcement of the first successful
cloning of a mammal from adult cells,
a ewe named Dolly, born at the Roslin
Institute in Scotland.

Read more

Sea Shepherds announce Norwegian whaler sinkings

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1997:

OSLO, Norway––The International
Whaling Commission on October 23 gave the
Makah tribe of Washington state the okay to
kill gray whales––or at any rate the Makah and
U.S. government claim it did. Seal penis prices
in Asia, boosted by Norwegian and Canadian
governmental marketing, are reportedly at
record highs. Steinar Bastesen, the most notorious
whaler and sealer of all, in October won a
seat in the Norwegian parliament.
Marine mammal defenders took grim
comfort and inspiration, however, from the
apparent sabotage sinking of one of Bastesen’s
ships, the 45-foot Morild. The Morild sank at
dockside on November 11 in Bronnoysund,
430 miles north of Oslo, just 12 days after
intruders purportedly dressed in Halloween
pirate costumes scuttled another Norwegian
whaling vessel, the Elin Toril, at Mortsun in
the Lofoten Islands, six months after a third
Norwegian whaling vessel, the Senet, was
allegedly firebombed while in drydock.

Read more

1 39 40 41 42 43 69