Seals & cod pieces

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, April 1998:

CHARLOTTETOWN, Prince
Edward Island––Gabrielle Fredericks, 102,
of Toronto, in early March demonstrated just
what kind of rugged macho man it takes to go
out on the ice among newborn harp seal pups:
none at all. A paid customer of Natural Habitat
Adventure Tours, a Boulder, Colorado-based
ecotourism firm, Fredericks shrugged off two
tour guides who held her arms at first, and
walked among the seals alone for several hours
in the Northumberland Strait, reported Nancy
Willis of the Charlottetown Guardian.
Fredericks left before the annual sealclubbing
bloodshed broke out on March 15.
She has a knack for leaving just in time: sixty
years earlier she, her late husband Joe, and
their son Martin fled Adolph Hitler and Austria
just a day before the outbreak of World War II.

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Hunters on the march––but is it a bluff?

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, April 1998:

LONDON, U.K.––The Countryside Alliance,
mobilized by the British Field Sports Society,
claimed 284,500 fox hunting supporters marched past
750 volunteer stewards who counted them by ranks at
the start of the March 2 Countryside March.
The departures alone took five hours.
The International Fund for Animal Welfare,
relying on Napier University scientists who used electronic
recorders, put the crowd count at less than half as
many: 142,000. Scotland Yard guesstimated 250,000,
still more than the estimated 215,000 British fox hunting
participants, and more than two-thirds of the total
BFSS membership––though not all attendees claimed to
be either fox hunters or BFSS members.
Representatives of about 60 Irish hunting
clubs weren’t even British citizens, but demonstrated
solidarity in support of recreational bloodbath anyway.

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MARINE MAMMALS

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

Days before former U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service CITES
Operations Branch chief Susan
Lieberman was promoted to head the
Office of Scientific Authority ( page
14), she told ANIMAL PEOPLE that
while the Makah Tribal Council h a s
reportedly “made assurances to the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration that” the grey whales it
intends to kill in Washington coastal
waters this fall “will be used exclusively
for local consumption and ceremonial
purposes, and will not be sold or offered
for sale, the USFWS has not had any
official communication with the Makah
Tribal Council on this issue. In the
event that the Service does communicate
officially with the Makah Tribal
Council on this issue,” Lieberman continued,

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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.”

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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.

Hunters have Hindi where they want him

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

WOODSTOCK, Illinois– – Hauled
to the McHenry County Jail in striped shirt
and jeans on February 4 for alleged contempt
of court, Chicago Animal Rights Coalition
founder Steve Hindi may spend the next five
months writing his memoirs––if he isn’t
killed.
Noted for daredevil undercover
videography and for flying the CHARC
paragliders between oncoming geese and
hunters at the now defunct Woodstock Hunt
Club, Hindi, 44, stays alive by accurate risk
assessment, and when he called ANIMAL
PEOPLE the night of February 17, there was
more worry in his voice than editor Merritt
Clifton had heard before, in frequent conversations
that began soon after Hindi, then a
hunter himself, saw the 1989 Labor Day
pigeon shoot at Hegins, Pennsylvania, and
was so appalled that he challenged organizer
Bob Tobash to a fist-fight.

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COURT CALENDAR

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

Shot dead on January 24 at an
illegal cockfight in Sunnyside, Washington,
Jesus Brambila, 29, of Yakima,
was apparently one of about a dozen armed
robbers, including his three brothers, who
tied up and beat around 20 other attendees,
Yakima County sheriff’s investigators said
on January 30. Brambila was killed, theorized
detective Robert Weedin, when
another robber’s shotgun discharged accidentally.
Several similar robberies had
occurred locally during the preceding 60
days, Weedin said, giving no further
details. The probe of Brambila’s death
apparently was not linked to the January 31
arrest of 39 people, mostly Philippine
Canadians, and confiscation of 72 cocks
plus cockfighting gear at Burnaby, British
Columbia, four hours north by car.

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COYOTES

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

New Jersey Animal Rights
Alliance member Stuart Chaifetz o n
January 26 began a fast intended to last all 22
days of the state’s second-ever coyote season.
Just five coyotes were killed during the 1997
season, but 900 hunters bought permits this
year to pursue the estimated 1,500 coyotes
who inhabit New Jersey.
Colorado state senator Dorothy
R u p e r t has introduced a bill, SB 144, to
rescind a bounty on wolves and coyotes set by
the Colorado Territorial Legislature in 1869.
Utah trapper Shane Cornwall,
38, of Payson, a 13-year employee of the
state Wildlife Services division, was killed
and helicopter pilot Allen H. Carter, 57, was
injured on January 14 when they flew into a
canyon wall after a day of strafing coyotes.

Do they see pink humans?

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1998:

BENGAL––Cops, sociologists,
and commanders of troops know that males
without females may start fighting and
boozing––and that’s the problem among the
elephants of eastern Bengal, reports the
Wildlife Institute of India.
Normal Indian elephant herds,
they say, consist of one male to several
females, governed by the eldest female.
Adult males usually travel apart from the
main herd when no females are in estrus,
but remain under herd rule. Bachelor elephants
are normally just the grown but not
yet mated, and the very old or dispossessed.
Few and alone, they historically kept out of
trouble.

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