On board live export vessels, live animals are at sea for extended periods of time and it is an arduous journey as they are subjected to severe heat, stress, overcrowding, while living in an accumulation of their own excrements. The cruelty is beyond horrific.
The government of New Zealand signed a new bill into law that bans
all live animal export beginning on April 30, 2023. This comes two
years after a live export disaster that claimed the lives of 6,000
cows and 41 crew members after a vessel that left New Zealand,
headed for China, subsequently capsized off the coast of Japan.
As per the NSPCA, the new law specifically states that, “A person
must not apply for, and the Director-General must not issue, an
animal welfare export certificate for the export of cattle, deer,
goats, or sheep by ship.”
On board live export vessels, live animals are at sea for extended
periods of time and it is an arduous journey as they are subjected
to severe heat, stress, overcrowding, while living in an
accumulation of their own excrements.
As previously reported by WAN, earlier this year, more than 15,000
sheep drowned after a live export ship sank in Sudan. In 2021, 3,000
cattle were stranded at sea for three months, leaving many dead,
dying, starving or extremely dehydrated.
FOUR PAWS is among the animal welfare organizations that are calling
the passing of this new law a “milestone for animal welfare” and
urges the EU to follow suit to ban all live animal exports when
publishing the new legislative agenda next year.
“Animals that are being transported for a longer period of time – be
it at sea or at land – suffer tremendously. This is a fact,” Pierre
Sultana, Director of the European Policy Office (EPO) at FOUR PAWS,
said in a statement, while also pointing to the recent tragedy where
800 bulls had to be slaughtered because of bureaucratic problems.
“Political decisions can also be implemented within a shorter period
of time, if there is a will to do so,” continued Sultana,
emphasizing that these types of animal welfare tragedies are
preventable.
“We urge the European Union to ban the export of animals for
slaughter, breeding and fattening,” concluded Sultana.