Upset at pigeon killing, Ayatollah orders probe

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2000:

TEHRAN––Abdolreza Izadpaneh, advisor to Iranian judiciary chief Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, in midJanuary told the Tehran newspaper Entekhab that the Judges Disciplinary Court would investigate the conduct of a lower court judge who earlier in the month ordered the slaughter of 170 pigeons to settle a dispute between two neighbors over who owned one of the birds.

“The head of the judiciary expressed sorrow upon hearing the verdict and ordered a probe into the case,” recounted Izadpaneh.

According to Associated Press, “The pigeons were slaughtered the same day the verdict was announced, prompting condemnations from animal protection groups and ordinary Iranians,” in a nation where public opposition to the actions of Islamic fundamentalist clerics is reputedly rare and sometimes fatal.

COURT CALENDAR

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2000:

 

Appeals

The Tennessee Court of Appeals on February 4 overturned a 1999 Roane County chancery court ruling that Tiger Haven, of Kingston, Tennessee, is in violation of zoning. Tiger Haven aggressively raised funds during 1999 on the premise that it might soon have to move. Tiger Haven was founded in 1993 by Joseph Donovan Parker, 52, and his wife Mary Lynn Parker. Accused of skimming $50,000 in proceeds during 1986 and 1997 from charity bingo games, Joe Parker drew a reduced sentence on lesser charges after turning prosecution witness in a joint federal/state probe of alleged corruption in bingo gambling that apparently led to the December 1989 suicide of Tennessee secretary of state Gentry Crowell. Parker eventually served three months in a halfway house for conspiracy and tax evasion.

U.S. District Judge Charles Kornmann on February 3 reaffirmed his own March 1999 ruling that the Bureau of Indian A f f a i r s need not do an environmental impact study of an 859,000-hog confinement farm now being built on Rosebud Sioux land by Richard Bell, of Wahpeton, North Dakota. The Humane Farming Association, South Dakota Peace & Justice Center, Prairie Hills Audubon Society, and C o n c e r n e d Rosebud Citizens had sued seeking to stop the project. But it may yet be stopped. Former Rosebud Sioux tribal council president Norman Wilson, who backed the hog farm, was ousted in late 1999, and the current Rosebud Sioux council on January 5 resolved that the work should stop pending further review.

Read more

Sealers fight new Russian humane law

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2000:

MOSCOW––Russian president Boris Yeltzin, 68, who resigned on New Year’s Day, apparently left to his successor Valdimir Putin, 47, the fate of a 22-page animal protection act approved 273-1 on December 1 by the State Duma (parliament).

Jen Tracy of the St. Petersburg Times reported on December 28 that the governors of Murmansk and Arkhangelsk had appealed to Yeltzin to veto the bill because it would have prohibited sealing.

The anti-sealing clause was apparently included in the bill mainly to protect the small Nerpa seal of landlocked Lake Baikal. Hunters have killed 5,000 to 6,000 Nerpa seals per year since 1992, and the seals are reportedly in a steep population decline.

Little is known of Putin’s views about animals. His wife and two daughters keep a pet poodle.

South Korea delays any action on dog meat bills

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2000:

 

SEOUL––The South Korean National Assembly subcommittee for agriculture on December 10 dropped until after the next general election any further consideration of competing bills which would either officially classify dogs as livestock saleable for human consumption or fully ban eating dog meat.

An Agriculture Ministry spokesperson reportedly told media that, “It is difficult to decide” which bill the ministry should support, “because half of the Korean people agree that dogs may be eaten and the other half do not. If the government allows dog meat trade and regulates dog meat sanitation, many foreigners will boycott Korea and World Cup 2002,” the international soccer championship which is to be cohosted by South Korea and Japan.

The Agriculture Ministry reportedly blamed the Health Ministry for failing to enforce the existing law, adopted before the 1988 Winter Olympics, thereby allowing dog meat consumption to rise from circa two million dogs per year in 1988 to about three million per year now.

Dogs are commonly eaten by older men of Han Chinese ethnicity, especially, throughout Asia. Cats are more often eaten by older women. Dog and cat fur exports to the U.S. from China and northern Thailand, recently exposed by the Humane Society of the U.S. and World Society for the Protection of Animals, are a largely a byproduct of eating dogs and cats––which practices are abhored by the Buddhist majority in Thailand, but are allowed under a policy of ethnic tolerance.

Korean dog-and-cat-eating customs are particularly cruel, by intent, because of a prevailing belief that the remains taste better and impart superior medicinal qualities if saturated in adrenalin during a slow death in pain and fear. Dogs are slowly hanged, flogged, and dehaired by blowtorch while still alive; cats’ bones are broken with a hammer before they are boiled alive.

[Petitions against Korean dog-and-cat-eating are distributed by the International Association for Korean Animals on behalf of the Korea Animal Protection Society c/o POB 20600, Oakland, CA 94620; >>ifkaps@msn.com<<.]

Vermont high court favors humane society

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1999:

MONTPELIER, Vt.– – T h e
Vermont Supreme Court on November 12
upheld a lower court ruling that the North
County Animal League, of Morrisville,
had the right to award a female German
shepherd to an adoptive couple rather
than to her former owners, Chasidy
Lamare and Charles Arnold of Wolcott.
The dog reportedly escaped
from a yard tether on June 3, 1997, and
was held for nine days by the Wolcott
animal control officer before being taken
to the League shelter, eight miles away.
She was there for four weeks before
Lamare and Arnold came looking for her.

Read more

COURT CALENDAR

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1999:

Sea Shepherd Conservation Society
founder Paul Watson, 47, on November 22
reported to prison in St. John’s, Newfoundland, to
serve the final nine days of his 1995 30-day sentence
for mischief in connection with a confrontation
versus the Cuban trawler Rio Las Casas on the
Grand Banks in July 1993. Watson was free pending
the outcome of an unsuccessful appeal to the
Newfoundland Supreme Court. He said a Sea
Shepherd Supporter had pledged to pay him
$10,000 U.S. for each day he was in prison.

Read more

Daryl Larson beats rap again ––but HFA wins law against farm animal neglect in Calif.

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1999:

Hog farmer and ex-veterinarian Daryl
Larson, 46, on October 20, 1999 escaped conviction
for allegedly abandoning 315 pigs on a farm near
Wyoming, Iowa, when a Jones County District
Court jury declared it could not reach a unanimous
verdict. No date was set for retrial.
The starving pigs were found on October
27, 1998, cannibalizing the remains of others.
Larson was previously convicted of leaving hogs to
starve in Clinton County, Iowa, in 1997; abandoning
as many as 2,000 hogs to starve near Craig,
Missouri, in 1995; not properly disposing of the
remains of 261 hogs who starved on his land near Des
Moines in 1994; and not properly disposing of about
300 hogs who allegedly starved on another of his
Iowa properties in 1993.

Read more

“Crush video” bill goes to White House

WASHINGTON D.C.– – T h e
U.S. Senate on November 19 unanimously
approved a bill by Rep. Elton Gallegly (RCalif.)
to ban the interstate distribution of
videos or films depicting gratuitous cruelty
to animals, if they are without “serious
religious, political, scientific, educational,
journalistic, historical, or art value.”
The bill cleared the House on
October 19, 372-42, and is expected to be
signed by President Bill Clinton.

Read more

Meat, milk firms hit for cruelty

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1999:

Humane organizations challenged
routine abuses at milk and meat production
facilities in Arizona, Florida, New
Jersey, and Virginia during October and
November 1999, winning one case out of
court, with the other outcomes pending.
Accepting a consent agreement
instead of facing cruelty charges,
McArthur Farms of Okeechobee, Florida,
is to help the University of Florida and the
Florida Agriculture Depart-ment develop a
training program to teach staff how to
properly kill culled calves; pay up to
$27,500 to produce training materials;

Read more

1 87 88 89 90 91 169