"Summit for the Horse" promotes slaughtering wild horses

From ANIMAL PEOPLE,  January/February 2011:

LAS VEGAS--Intended to promote horse slaughter in general,  and slaughtering wild horses in specific,  the Summit for the Horse held in Las Vegas during the first week of January 2011 heard messages from Bureau of Land Management director Bob Abbey and slaughterhouse design consultant Temple Grandin that were not what most of the reportedly sparse audience wanted to hear.

Not more than 200 people converged on the Southpoint Casino to attend the Summit for the Horse,  according to a variety of crowd counts. Most counts placed the plenary attendance at 100-150,  including 42 speakers.

Speaking for allied animal use industries were National Cattlemen’s Beef Association vice president J.D. Alexander,  Masters of Fox Hounds Association executive director Dennis Foster, and Mindy Patterson,  who led breeder opposition to Missouri Proposition B,  a ballot initiative to increase regulation of puppy breeders that was approved by voters in November 2010. Read more

WikiLeaks show Australia favored Japanese story of Ady Gil sinking (VIDEO)

From ANIMAL PEOPLE,  January/February 2011:

 

MELBOURNE--“Embassy cables,  obtained by WikiLeaks and provided exclusively to The Age,”  show that Australian diplomats quickly defended the Japanese whalers whose ship Shonan Maru #2 cut the bow off the high-speed anti-whaling vessel Ady Gil on January 6, 2010,  reported Philip Dorling of the Melbourne Age on January 8, 2011. Read more

BOOKS: The Domestic Cat: Bird Killer, Mouser and Destroyer of Wild Life

The Domestic Cat:  Bird Killer,  Mouser and Destroyer of Wild Life;  Means of Utilizing and Controlling It
by Edward Howe Forbush
Commonwealth of Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture,  1916.   [Free 112-page download from <http://books.google.com/books>.]

The November/December 2010 edition of ANIMAL PEOPLE noted on page one that the American Bird Conservancy had on December 1,  2010 issued a media release extensively praising what publicist Robert Johns termed “a new peer-reviewed report titled, Feral Cats & Their Management from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln,”  which advocated killing feral cats.

“The report began in an undergraduate wildlife management class,”  revealed Associated Press writer Margery A. Beck,  “with students writing reports on feral cats based on existing research.  The students’ professor and other UNL researchers then compiled the report from the students’ work.” Read more

Chinese activists object to Canadian deal to sell seal meat & oil to China

From ANIMAL PEOPLE,  January/February 2011:

BEIJING,  HALIFAX--Canadian Fisheries Minister Gail Shea on January 12,  2011 announced to news media by teleconference call from Beijing that the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and the Chinese Administration of Quality Supervision have reached an agreement which will allow Canadian sealers to export seal meat and oil to China for human consumption. Read more

New Malaysian Wildlife Conservation Act including anti-cruelty language comes into effect

From ANIMAL PEOPLE,  January/February 2011:

PETALING JAYA,  Malaysia— The arrival of 2011 in Malaysia brought into full effect the Wildlife Conservation Act,  a sweeping update of 30-year-old previous legislation that includes under one heading the corpus of Malaysian law covering almost every aspect of human interaction with wild animals.  Like most national wildlife laws,  the Malaysian Wildlife Conservation Act covers hunting,  fishing,  capturing wildlife, protection of endangered and threatened species, and dealing with dangerous and “nuisance” wildlife.  It also includes language prohibiting cruelty to wildlife,  including captive wildlife, and establishes basic requirements for zoo management. Read more

U.S. whaling negotiator hinted to Japan that IRS might pull Sea Shepherd Conservation Society nonprofit status

From ANIMAL PEOPLE,  January/February 2011:

 

MADRID--U.S. State Department messages published on January 3,  2011 by WikiLeaks and the leading Spanish newspaper El Pais disclose that U.S. diplomats in negotiation with senior Japanese officials entertained the possibility of asking the Internal Revenue Service to revoke the nonprofit status of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society.

The State Department messages also confirm the belief widespread among whale conservationists that current White House policy seeks as a first priority to lower the profile of confrontation with Japan over whaling. Read more

Coffee fad revives civet farming (long version)

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November/December 2010

DENPASAR, HANOI–Just seven years after
China banned civet farming because of the
association of civet consumption with more than
800 human deaths from Sudden Acute Respiratory
Syndrome, a vogue for pricy civet coffee has
brought the industry back perhaps bigger than
ever–and certainly in many more places.
Sold to coffee snobs as kopi luwak, the
Indonesian word for it, civet coffee is brewed
from the beans that civets excrete after eating
coffee berries, one of their favorite foods.
Civet coffee is by reputation stronger and
usually more aromatic than most coffees.
Collecting and salvaging the excreted
beans from wild civets is so laborious that civet
coffee, known for centuries, has historically
been so costly to produce as to be consumed only
in small amounts by the very rich and jaded. But
civet farming in coffee-growing country has
brought civet coffee within occasionally reach of
the merely affluent–at prices of from $50 to
$100 a cup.

Read more

“Lizard King” sentenced

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November/December 2010:

 

PETALING JAYA, Malaysia–Anson Wong Keng
Liang, 52, on November 6, 2010 saw the
Malaysian High Court increase to five years a
six-month sentence he received from Selang
Sessions Court on September 6 for smuggling boa
constrictors.
Initially trafficking in reptiles via the now
defunct Bukit Jambul Reptile Sanctuary, Wong was
called by Bryan Christy “the most important
person in the international reptile business” in
Christy’s 2008 exposé book The Lizard King.
Arrested in Mexico City in 1998, Wong was
extradited to the U.S., where he served a a
71-months prison term after pleading guilty to
40 counts of smuggling, conspiracy,
money-laundering, and other violations of
wildlife laws.

Read more

Review: Born Wild

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November/December 2010:

Born Wild by Tony Fitzjohn
Crown Publishers (c/o Random House, 1745 Broadway, New York, NY
10019), 2010.
310 pages, hardcover. $24.00.

The title Born Wild suggests an adventurous book by a daring
author. That describes it. Growing up in England, Fitzjohn loved
Scouting. Tarzan tales enchanted him. As a troubled teen Fitzjohn
landed in Outward Bound programs that eventually took him to
life-changing experiences in Africa. A letter Fitzjohn sent to Born
Free author Joy Adamson sent Fitzjohn to Kenya, where at age 22 he
became assistant to her then-husband, conservationist George
Adamson, who was then 61. Fitzjohn helped Adamson to rehabilitate
injured or formerly captive lions, leopards, and African wild dogs
for return to the wild.
Tracking lions in the bush back in those days, between 30
and 40 years ago, was considerably more difficult and dangerous than
today because radio collars had not yet been developed. Fitzjohn
despaired when beloved lions suddenly vanished, such as one named
Lisa, whose disappearance “left a big hole in our lives. She was a
lovely lioness.”
Like George Adamson, Fitzjohn spent years cultivating
relationships with lions, trying to build trust, mindful that lions
are still wild animals and may behave as such, no matter how tame
they seem. Once in 1975, “I was incredibly lucky to survive,”
recalls Fitzjohn. “My attacker’s teeth had come within millimeters
of both my carotid and jugular arteries. There are holes in my
throat that I could put a fist through, and I did.”
After several months of recovery Fitzjohn returned to help
George Adamson at Kora. The camp they built eventually became the
hub of the Kora National Reserve, initially designated in 1973 but
not added to the Kenyan national park system until 1989, after
George Adamson came to the aid of a tourist and was murdered in a
confrontation with poachers. Joy Adamson had already been killed in
a confrontation with an ex-employee in January 1980.
Conflicts with poachers and illegal grazers intensified after
a border conflict between Kenya and Somalia in 1978. Somalia lost
the war but, Fitzjohn remembers, “There were suddenly a lot of
well-armed Somali men flooding across the border into northern Kenya.
They were bandits, well-trained, ruthless and armed.”
Another camp near Kora was attacked and everything of value
was looted. Two workers were killed. Poaching escalated. The
Kenyan government was either unwilling or unable to stop it, despite
warnings that wildlife tourism could be destroyed. Political unrest,
corruption, drought, and tribal strife plagued Kenya for more than
a decade. Understates Fitzjohn, “Kenya had suddenly become a scary
place.”
Of George Adamson’s murder, Fitzjohn says, “If I had been
there it wouldn’t have happened.” Racked with guilt for having been
elsewhere, Fitzjohn moved to Tanzania –“the perfect place for me to
bury myself and reinvent myself after the events of the past few
years.”
For more than 20 years now Fitzjohn has worked tirelessly to
rehabilitate and return to the wild injured animals in Tanzania. He
has continued to defend game preserves against poachers and illegal
grazers, many of whom are armed, and to stand up to government
officials, who are sometimes indifferent, sometimes corrupt, and
sometimes just hellbent on economic development at any cost.
Fitzjohn travels the world to raise money to continue saving African
animals. And he always gives credit for his successes to George
Adamson, who made his wild life possible. –Debra J. White

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