Fish & Wildlife Service Seeks to Leghold Trap

Fish & Wildlife Service Seeks to Leghold Trap

June 2008 3/22/13 9:11 PM Page 1 Fish & Wildlife Service seeks to leghold trap & V E N T U R A – – “The U.S. Fish & miles off the California coast, is part of a U.S. Wildlife Service is proposing to use padded leg Navy sea test range. The only human residents traps and hunters to eradicate 100 to 200 feral are Navy personnel. The Fish & Wildlife cats now living on U.S. Navy-owned San Service contends that the habitat is too rugged Nicolas Island to protect endangered species,” and inaccessible for neuter/return cat control to Ventura County Star reporter Scott Hadly be practicable, and that the cats are much too revealed on June 6, 2008. “Dogs also would wild to be tamed for possible adoption. be used to flush out some of the harder-to-catch The cats, reportedly on the island for cats, according to the plan. The cats would be more than 50 years, are blamed for killing shot or given a lethal injection on the spot,” Brandt’s cormorants, western gulls, deer mice, Hadly wrote. and two federally protected threatened species, 14,000-acre San Nicholas Island, 60 western snowy plovers and island night lizards. “Because the wild cats are hunters, they com- pete for scarce food with the native island fox, also a threatened species,” wrote Hadly. The Fish & Wildlife Service proposal to trap and shoot cats was immediately opposed by Humane Society of the U.S. feral cat pro- gram chief Nancy Peterson, but she had only until June 17, 2008 to rally opposition––unless the Fish & Wildlife Service is persuaded to extend the comment period. [Details of the cat-killing plan were posted to <www.montroserestoration.gov>. Displaced Chinese family living with their dogs in a tent. (Doris Yiu) Comments could be e-mailed to <fw8cfwocom - [email protected]>, or could be sent by conven - tional mail to Jane Hendron, U.S. Fish and Rescuers rock in Sichuan Wildlife Service, 6010 Hidden Valley Road, Carlsbad, CA 92011.] CHENGDU––“People and bears Jill Robinson in the first hours after an (continued on page 18) okay although buildings damaged,” e- earthquake measuring 7.8 on the Richter Feral cat. (Kim Bartlett) mailed Animals Asia Foundation founder scale struck northern Sichuan, China. Based near Chengdu, the Sich- uan capital, the Animals Asia Found- ation’s China Bear Rescue Centre was far south of the earthquake epicenter, yet still within the radius of catastrophic damage. ANIMAL PEOPLE More than 80,000 humans and 12 million livestock died, according to official esti- News For People Who Care About Animals mates. Hitting at 2:28 p.m. on May 12, 2008, the quake was followed by after- shocks for more than three weeks, many of them of Richter magnitude 6.0 or larger. June 2008 “The quake was felt at the sanc- Volume XVIII, #5 tuary and everyone ran to the car park,” Robinson added. “Phone lines are down and communication by e-mail is sporadic.” Robinson, at the Animals Asia (continued on page 9) Live cattle exports from Down Under to Egypt resume––new fatwa may help CAIRO, CANBERRA– – A u s t r a l - animal export welfare with Egypt will ‘require ian agriculture minister Tony Burke on May 9, monitoring and recording the movements of 2008 authorized resumption of live cattle Australian dairy cattle. Australian officials exports to Egypt. and industry assessed the Ain Sokhna facility Previous agriculture minister Peter and were satisfied it was consistent with McGuarin on February 26, 2006 suspended World Organization for Animal Health guide- cattle exports to Egypt, after the Australian lines for animal welfare. Cattle will not be edition of the television magazine show 6 0 permitted to be moved to other Egyptian abat- Minutes aired video of abuses at the Bassetin toirs or feedlots.” slaughterhouse near Cairo. Responded Royal SPCA of Australia Taken in January 2006 by Animals scientific officer for farm animals Melina Australia investigator Lyn White, the video Tensen, “The standards in Middle Eastern showed workers poking out the eyes of cattle abattoirs and also in this new Egyptian abattoir and cutting their leg tendons before subjecting are nowhere near the standards of slaughter them to a version of hallal slaughter that clear- here in Australia. For example, animals are ly flunked the goal of the animals not suffer- not stunned in the Middle East, nor are they ing. The procedures were immediately going to be stunned in this abattoir in Egypt, denounced by Australian Federation of Islamic as far as we understand.” Councils hallal certification representative Pre-stunning is not traditionally part Animals raised for sale to ethnic communities maintaining “old country” slaughtering and Munir Hussain. of hallal and kosher slaughter, which are done butchering customs are among those most likely to go to seldom inspected local abbatoirs. “Australian cattle will only be by millenias-old procedures originally meant (Merritt Clifton) imported to Egypt into the new state-of-the-art to reduce animal suffering at slaughter as feedlot and processing facility in Ain Sokhna,” much as possible with Bronze Age technology. Burke told Australian Broadcasting Corporat- Some religious authorities have declared that USDA to reinstate ban on ion reporter Jane Bardon. “They will be han- pre-stunning is permitted under the kosher dled and slaughtered in accordance with inter- slaughter laws proclaimed by Moses and the slaughtering downed cattle national standards for animal welfare.” h a l l a l slaughter laws proclaimed by Moham- WASHINGTON D.C.––U.S. Agri- eral Phyllis Fong is working on a separate Added Bardon, “Burke says a mem- med, but the topic is still under intense debate. culture Secretary Ed Schafer on May 20, 2008 investigation into the treatment of animals at (continued on page 15) orandum of understanding to be signed on live concluded a 60-day review of U.S. slaughter- slaughter plants, and the USDA is still analyz- ing procedures by announcing a total ban on ing the results from its 60-day review.” ANIMAL PEOPLE killing for human consumption any cattle Of the 34 million cattle sent to PO Box 960 Nonprofit Organization “who are too weak to rise or walk.” slaughter in the U.S. in 2007, about 2,700 U.S. Postage Paid “The planned change would shut went down and were reinspected, according to Clinton, WA 98236-0960 down an exception that allows a small number USDA data. Fewer than 1,000 passed the ANIMAL PEOPLE, Inc. of so-called ‘downer’ cattle into the food sup- reinspection. ply if they pass veterinary inspection,” “The review [of slaughtering proto- explained Associated Press writer Erica col] was prompted by a 143-million-pound Werner. “Downer cows pose increased risk beef recall in February 2008,” Werner for mad cow disease, E. coli and other infec- recalled, “ordered after the Humane Society tions, partly because they typically wallow in of the United States released undercover video feces. They are already mostly banned from showing employees abusing downer cows at slaughter [for human consumption], but under the Westland/Hallmark Meat Company in current rules can be allowed if they fall down Chino, California. Downer cows at the plant after passing an initial veterinary inspection, were slaughtered without the required second and then are re-inspected and pass that second veterinary inspection.” inspection, too. “ The USDA in April 2008 billed the “More changes could be on the now closed Westland/Hallmark slaughter- way,” added Reuters correspondent house for $67.2 million, about two-thirds of Christopher Doering. “USDA inspector gen- (continued on page 19) June 2008 3/22/13 9:11 PM Page 2 2 - ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2008 June 2008 3/22/13 9:11 PM Page 3 Editorial feature ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2008 - 3 No need to apologize for helping animals Once upon a time at the earliest edge of recorded memory, the earth shook, the sky Indeed, one would have a difficult time finding any major disaster, from avalanches caught fire, the sea rose, a tidal wave swept away anything standing, and for forty days and to wars, in which human victims have not responded generously to the suffering of animals forty nights a torrential rain and wet ash covered everything left. completely unknown to them, who shared their plight. The myths of at least 35 ancient cultures representing every inhabited continent and Afterward some of the spontaneous animals rescuers have articulated various reasons many remote islands recall that event, in at least 175 different versions of the story, which for helping the animals, but others have simply shrugged. They helped because help was appears to be among the oldest, most ubiquitous, and still among the most popular of all sto- needed, and they were able to give it. No further pretext seemed necessary. ries. Many peoples date their history from whatever happened. The number of human sur- ANIMAL PEOPLE wondered what other international charities involved in animal vivors is said to have been anywhere from just one pregnant woman to 30 scattered individuals disaster relief might say, so circulated the RSPCA statement for comment. ––and their animals. Responded Humane Society of the U.S. president Wayne Pacelle, “In our modern What exactly inspired the Great Flood myths, when the catastrophe occurred, and society, the lives of people and animals are entangled, and we know from first-hand experi- where it occurred are all keenly debated. The myths all seem to describe the same event, but ence that many people will not leave a disaster area unless they know their animals will also may recount the travails of several different people in widely separated parts of the world.

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