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Cats 'farmed for skins in EU'

 
 
frolic
 
Reply Thu 8 May, 2003 03:07 pm
BBC News has seen evidence which suggests that cats are being farmed for their skins in the European Union.

It is thought that tens of thousands, possibly hundreds of thousands of cat and dog skins are traded in Europe each year.

Campaigners say that now is the time for national governments or the European Commission to act.

Europe, it seems, is a magnet for cat and dog fur.

Cat blankets, so the aficionados say, are good for rheumatism.

Dog pelts are often labelled misleadingly and sold as the fur of some exotic, even mythical beast.

Quote:
Cat and dog fur trade
Campaigners claim 2 million cats and dogs slaughtered every year
Main exporter: China
12 to 15 adult dogs needed to make a dog fur coat
Up to 24 cats needed for cat fur coat
Cat and dog fur also used in hats, gloves, shoes, blankets, stuffed animals and toys
Dog fur sometimes labelled as: Gae-wolf, sobaki, Asian jackal, goupee, loup d'Asie, Corsac fox, dogues du Chine, or simply fake or exotic fur
Cat fur sometimes labelled as: house cat, wild cat, katzenfelle, rabbit, goyangi, mountain cat


Since the US has banned the trade of cat and dog skins, the European market has expanded.

A video seen by BBC correspondent Tim Franks shows one Belgian furrier displaying a blanket he says was made from cats farmed in Belgium.

What is more, he says that stray cats and dogs are rounded up and skinned.

That would seem to contradict the assertion from the officials who help run the EU at the European Commission that there is no cat or dog farming inside the union.

"Let me say that cats and dogs are not farmed for their fur in the 15 member states of the European Union," EU Health and Consumer Protection commissioner David Byrne wrote to a British member of the European Parliament last year.

Officials in Brussels repeated on Thursday that they had no evidence of cat or dog farming in the EU.

They said it was up to national governments to ban the trade in cat and dog fur.

Alsatian coat

So far, though, only Italy has brought in such a ban.

British MEP Struan Stevenson told the BBC that two million cats and dogs are being killed in China alone each year, in order to satisfy demand in Europe.

He also said that he has seen videos of animals being skinned alive.

As evidence of the trade he has collected: A blanket made out of four golden retrievers, bought in Copenhagen Individual cat skins complete with eye-holes, paws and tails, bought in Barcelona A full-length coat made out of up to 42 Alsatian puppies, bought in Berlin Campaigners accuses the European Commission of lacking the political will to address the issue, arguing that the trade is not only morally repugnant, but also a case of consumer fraud.

The British Department of Trade and Industry says it is examining the case for more scientific testing and more accurate labelling.

But it says that scientific testing very difficult to do on account of the expense and the shortage of laboratories capable of doing it.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe/3009537.stm
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 1,146 • Replies: 10
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New Haven
 
  1  
Reply Thu 8 May, 2003 04:53 pm
Looks like that might be going on in Boston, too.

I'll post the link.
0 Replies
 
New Haven
 
  1  
Reply Thu 8 May, 2003 04:57 pm
Raid on cat breeder's second apartment yields more dead, diseased cats

By Associated Press, 5/8/2003 08:01

WATERTOWN, Mass. (AP) Police found 12 dead cats and 52 diseased cats in a raid of Beacon Hill cat breeder Heidi Erickson's second apartment.

Last week, Erickson's Beacon Hill apartment was condemned after Boston police and code inspectors found 60 dead cats in her freezer and refrigerator, along with cat feces and blood on the floor.

''Today has been a tremendous assault on my privacy, my family, and my dear cats,'' Erickson told reporters Wednesday evening.

Erickson also described herself as a ''neat freak,'' and added she should be judged by other cat breeders, who understand her situation, and not authorities.

The discovery in Watertown comes a day after a Boston Housing Court judge banned Erickson from living in Boston if she wants to keep cats.

Erickson, 42, hasn't been arrested or cited, but Watertown police Lt. Michael Long said she will face charges ''along the lines of animal cruelty.'' Boston police are considering similar charges.

Last week, Erickson said the evidence against her had been fabricated, and the case against her ''over-exploded.''

Many of the cats found Wednesday were emaciated and some had sores, according to Alan Borgal, law enforcement director for the Animal Rescue League of Boston, which took in some of the cats.


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0 Replies
 
frolic
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 May, 2003 03:32 am
Every continent has its scandal.

from: Save the kangaroo
The largest massacre of land animals on the planet takes place in Australia each year. Millions of adult kangaroos are shot for their meat and skins. Millions of orphaned baby joeys, "worthless" to the industry, are shot, stamped on, clubbed over the head or abandoned to die.

Shockingly, the number one supporters of this barbaric trade are sports shoe manufacturers, who purchase the skins and turn them into football boots. Adidas, one of the industry's biggest customers, is a major driving force behind the industry.

There is no excuse for Adidas to continue supporting an industry that causes so much suffering. The original designer of the Predator boot, ex-Liverpool player Craig Johnston, has publically stated:

Quote:
"The original model [of the Predator] was an all-rubber shoe. Synthetics, rubbers and new materials are definitely the future of football boots. I don't agree with killing kangaroos."


There are modern, hi-tec synthetic fabrics available which Adidas could switch to right now. Ronaldo - arguably the best football player in the world - wears a boot which is made of 100 per cent synthetic materials. If boots made from synthetic materials are good enough for Ronaldo then Adidas has no excuse for not using them too!

video "Killing for Kicks" which exposes Adidas and the trade in kangaroo leather is available online
0 Replies
 
frolic
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 May, 2003 03:52 am
Adidas sued for Breaking California Law
Quote:
"Adidas is getting away with murder in Australia and California," said lauren Ornelas, US Campaigns Director of Viva!USA. "They are showing the same disregard for California law that the hunters show the baby kangaroos whom they bludgeon to death. "


Attorney David Blatte, who filed the suit on behalf of Viva!, summed up the legal issue:
Quote:
"The California legislature has decided that certain animals need protection. By using kangaroo leather for commercial purposes, Adidas is saying that it doesn't care about animals or about the law."


Viva!, an international organization with USA Headquarters in Davis, CA is organizing a global campaign against Adidas' use of kangaroo skins. For further information on this campaign and to view pictures of kangaroo hunting, go to www.savethekangaroo.com.
0 Replies
 
steissd
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 May, 2003 08:17 am
I only fail to understand why kangaroos, cats and dogs get priority treatment by animal rights groups, if compared to cattle, sheep and poultry. People use animals' body parts for food and garments manufacturing thousands years. Maybe, accent is to be made on slaughtering ways: the ones that cause the least suffering to tha animal are to be chosen.
0 Replies
 
cavfancier
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 May, 2003 08:29 am
I own a dog, and love him dearly...however, if in a country where it was offered up as a meal, I would taste for sure. Also, if the pelts are a bi-product of an already existing food industry, why not use them for clothing? Endangered species should definitely be protected, but with the number of stray cats and dogs in our cities...well, the SPCA can only do so much, they won't all find homes. Is euthanizing them a better solution?
0 Replies
 
New Haven
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 May, 2003 08:34 am
Birth control is the answer.
0 Replies
 
cavfancier
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 May, 2003 08:37 am
Well, I agree with you there NH...but it ain't happening, despite Bob Barker.
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 May, 2003 10:59 am
steissd wrote:
I only fail to understand why kangaroos, cats and dogs get priority treatment by animal rights groups, if compared to cattle, sheep and poultry. .


Where? Any example for this?
0 Replies
 
New Haven
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 May, 2003 11:44 am
The animal rights people were upset , when chickens were used by American military personnel to "sniff" out toxic fumes in Iraq.
0 Replies
 
 

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