Australia, Ireland, the United States and the UK are the only countries in which greyhound racing continues. The sport has been ended by many states in the USA with only two tracks remaining.
Animal welfare charity the League Against Cruel Sports has welcomed
moves to ban greyhound racing in New Zealand and called on the UK
Government to adopt similar measures and wind down the industry in
England and Wales.
The ban, announced by the New Zealand Government today, is based on
the unacceptably high number of deaths and injuries suffered by the
dogs, a situation mirrored in the UK.
The ban will come into force in 2026, allowing time for the
greyhounds to be rehomed and will leave only four countries across
the world which still allow greyhound racing to take place.
Emma Judd, the League’s head of campaigns, said: “We welcome the
decision by the New Zealand Government to ban greyhound racing and
call on the UK Government to follow suit and end the appalling death
toll and unacceptably high rate of injuries.
“Greyhound racing on oval tracks at great speeds is inherently
unsafe with dogs being sacrificed simply for the profits of the
gambling industry.”
The Greyhound Board of Great Britian, the industry’s governing body
has been stipulated by the UK government to provide death and injury
figures for racing greyhounds every year since 2017 and they paint a
bleak picture.
In 2023 alone, 109 greyhounds died racing on greyhound tracks and
4,238 injuries were sustained by the dogs, a high proportion of the
15,000 active racing greyhounds in the UK.
A further 55 greyhounds were found no home or designated unsuitable
for homing so were euthanised as the industry didn’t have a use for
them anymore.
Since 2017, 1,234 greyhounds have died at trackside and a total of
31,359 injuries were sustained by the dogs.
A report conducted by Professor Andrew Knight into greyhound racing
established in 2018 that racing around oval tracks put huge strain
on the greyhounds’ bodies and made deaths and injuries inevitable.
Accidents or pile-ups at or approaching the first bend are notorious
and the report also highlights significant welfare concerns around
the kennelling and standards of care applied to racing greyhounds.
Emma added: “With greyhound racing now taking place in only four
countries, it’s time for the UK Government to step in and ban it and
prove it is serious about its promise to improve animal welfare in
this country.
“The greyhound industry has a callous disregard for the lives of
racing greyhounds so we are calling for the ‘sport’ to be phased out
and the animals given new loving homes with families.”
Australia, Ireland, the United States and the UK are the only
countries in which greyhound racing continues. The sport has been
ended by many states in the USA with only two tracks remaining.
The Welsh Parliament also has the power to ban greyhound racing in
Wales, with the Welsh Government recently consulting on whether to
consider a phased ban on greyhound racing. The consultation closed
in March 2024 and is awaiting publication of an outcome.