CES INTERDICTIONS DE DÉBARQUEMENT POUR RAISONS DITES SANITAIRES ME SEMBLENT ETRE N' IMPORTE QUOI!!(voir surligné rouge)
SOURCE UN SITE VEGAN
Posted on September 2, 2012
Yesterday (1st September), a news item was posted on bikyamasr.com titled ‘Over 30,000 baby cows stranded in Egypt face death’.
‘… CAIRO: An estimated 32,000 baby cows are currently stranded at an Egyptian port after arriving on their long journey from Australia. The ministry of agriculture and the Veterinary Public Quarantine have said they have been at the Ain Sokhna port for 6 weeks after they arrived from Australia.
The ministry argued that they are under quarantine after fears they were given cancerous treatments before being loaded onto a vessel that took them from Australia to Egypt, where they are to be slaughtered.
The ministry has said it has yet to determine the fate of the animals and they have remained on board the ships in what animal rights groups have told Bikyamasr.com are “horrendous and inhumane” conditions.
Live export from Australia to the Islamic world is a controversial practice that sees thousands of animals crammed into small crates and transported by sea to their destination to be slaughtered for food.
According to the ministry, tests are continuing to learn more about the potential carcinogen that had been given to the animals before they would be unloaded. Tests have reportedly been ongoing for the past month at a private lab in Egypt, but no results have been conclusive.
According to a al-Shorouk newspaper report, the animals are likely to remain in their confinement for a number of weeks more in order for further tests to take place.
Earlier this year, some 3,000 cattle died on a ship destined for Egypt after the Egyptian government refused to allow the ship to dock at a Red Sea port.
Animals Australia, the leading organization reporting on the controversial live export trade to the Middle East and Southeast Asia, said the incident was among the worst the industry had witnessed in years.
Animals Australia’s Campaign Director, Lyn White, said in a statement to Bikyamasr.com that the ship was anchored at sea after being refused port in a number of countries, including Egypt, where the cattle were supposed to be offloaded.
It’s understood that ventilation problems on the converted livestock vessel, the MV Gracia Del Mar, had caused the deaths of more than half of the animals on board since the ship left South America for Egypt a few weeks ago. The ship was anchored in the Red Sea for weeks and saw more animals perish as a result.
“This is nothing short of an animal welfare disaster. If remaining cattle are not offloaded more of these animals will suffer appalling deaths at sea. We are appealing to authorities in Egypt to offload the remaining cattle at al-Sohkna, as was originally intended.
“This disaster is just another example of the inherent risks of transporting animals by sea. It was only nine years ago that 5,000 Australian sheep perished on board the MV Cormo Express after country after country refused to allow it to berth.
“And this isn’t the first time that mechanical issues have caused mass deaths on live export ships. We only need to look to the breakdown of the Al Messilah in Adelaide last year. Had that vessel broken down on the open ocean it would have caused a similar welfare catastrophe — as thousands of animals would have died.
“Australia also exports cattle to Al Sohkna Livestock company in Egypt. Whilst we have an MoU with Egypt which should ensure the offloading of our animals, it has never been put to the test. The Egyptians thus far have flatly refused to allow the MV Gracia Del Mar to dock despite the mass suffering of the animals on board.
“If they continue to refuse to allow the surviving animals to be unloaded it would provide little confidence that the non-binding agreement with Australia would be honoured if a similar incident were to occur on an Australian livestock ship.
“It should not matter if these cattle aren’t Australian and if Brazil doesn’t have a similar piece of paper, they should not be abandoned to suffer and die at sea. We are appealing to Egyptian authorities to offload these cattle as a matter of urgency.”
Australia’s live sheep exports have fallen significantly over the past decade.
In 2010, three million sheep were exported compared with 6.3 million in 2001.
Australia’s government last year was to see a bill that would have banned live export to the world, but industry lobbyists fought back and forced the legislation off the table in a move that angered animal activists in the country and across the world, notably the Islamic world, which receives the lion’s share of live cattle and sheep from both Australia and Brazil …’
Read the item, view image and add your comment online at www.bikyamasr.com/76605/over-30000-baby-cows-stranded-in-egypt-face-death/
[Vegans say abandon the exploitation, abuse and slaughter of all animals, and abandon the production and consumption of all animal products.]
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‘… CAIRO: An estimated 32,000 baby cows are currently stranded at an Egyptian port after arriving on their long journey from Australia. The ministry of agriculture and the Veterinary Public Quarantine have said they have been at the Ain Sokhna port for 6 weeks after they arrived from Australia.
The ministry argued that they are under quarantine after fears they were given cancerous treatments before being loaded onto a vessel that took them from Australia to Egypt, where they are to be slaughtered.
The ministry has said it has yet to determine the fate of the animals and they have remained on board the ships in what animal rights groups have told Bikyamasr.com are “horrendous and inhumane” conditions.
Live export from Australia to the Islamic world is a controversial practice that sees thousands of animals crammed into small crates and transported by sea to their destination to be slaughtered for food.
According to the ministry, tests are continuing to learn more about the potential carcinogen that had been given to the animals before they would be unloaded. Tests have reportedly been ongoing for the past month at a private lab in Egypt, but no results have been conclusive.
According to a al-Shorouk newspaper report, the animals are likely to remain in their confinement for a number of weeks more in order for further tests to take place.
Earlier this year, some 3,000 cattle died on a ship destined for Egypt after the Egyptian government refused to allow the ship to dock at a Red Sea port.
Animals Australia, the leading organization reporting on the controversial live export trade to the Middle East and Southeast Asia, said the incident was among the worst the industry had witnessed in years.
Animals Australia’s Campaign Director, Lyn White, said in a statement to Bikyamasr.com that the ship was anchored at sea after being refused port in a number of countries, including Egypt, where the cattle were supposed to be offloaded.
It’s understood that ventilation problems on the converted livestock vessel, the MV Gracia Del Mar, had caused the deaths of more than half of the animals on board since the ship left South America for Egypt a few weeks ago. The ship was anchored in the Red Sea for weeks and saw more animals perish as a result.
“This is nothing short of an animal welfare disaster. If remaining cattle are not offloaded more of these animals will suffer appalling deaths at sea. We are appealing to authorities in Egypt to offload the remaining cattle at al-Sohkna, as was originally intended.
“This disaster is just another example of the inherent risks of transporting animals by sea. It was only nine years ago that 5,000 Australian sheep perished on board the MV Cormo Express after country after country refused to allow it to berth.
“And this isn’t the first time that mechanical issues have caused mass deaths on live export ships. We only need to look to the breakdown of the Al Messilah in Adelaide last year. Had that vessel broken down on the open ocean it would have caused a similar welfare catastrophe — as thousands of animals would have died.
“Australia also exports cattle to Al Sohkna Livestock company in Egypt. Whilst we have an MoU with Egypt which should ensure the offloading of our animals, it has never been put to the test. The Egyptians thus far have flatly refused to allow the MV Gracia Del Mar to dock despite the mass suffering of the animals on board.
“If they continue to refuse to allow the surviving animals to be unloaded it would provide little confidence that the non-binding agreement with Australia would be honoured if a similar incident were to occur on an Australian livestock ship.
“It should not matter if these cattle aren’t Australian and if Brazil doesn’t have a similar piece of paper, they should not be abandoned to suffer and die at sea. We are appealing to Egyptian authorities to offload these cattle as a matter of urgency.”
Australia’s live sheep exports have fallen significantly over the past decade.
In 2010, three million sheep were exported compared with 6.3 million in 2001.
Australia’s government last year was to see a bill that would have banned live export to the world, but industry lobbyists fought back and forced the legislation off the table in a move that angered animal activists in the country and across the world, notably the Islamic world, which receives the lion’s share of live cattle and sheep from both Australia and Brazil …’
Read the item, view image and add your comment online at www.bikyamasr.com/76605/over-30000-baby-cows-stranded-in-egypt-face-death/
[Vegans say abandon the exploitation, abuse and slaughter of all animals, and abandon the production and consumption of all animal products.]
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