Humane Society International


SÃO PAULO—Carrefour, Brazil’s leading food retailer, has announced it will sell exclusively cage-free eggs at its supermarkets throughout Brazil, becoming the first supermarket company in the country to make this commitment. Carrefour operates almost 650 stores throughout Brazil and will complete its transition to cage-free eggs by 2025 for Carrefour-brand eggs and by 2028 for all other brands sold in its supermarkets.

This announcement comes after many years of working with Humane Society International/Brazil (HSI) and discussions with other organizations, such as Mercy For Animals, Fórum Nacional de Proteção e Defesa Animal, and Animal Equality. Carrefour and HSI will continue to work together on the implementation of this policy. A joint workshop and farm tour for the company’s Brazilian egg suppliers to share best practices and technical expertise in cage-free production are already scheduled to take place at Carrefour headquarters in France this year.

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In a policy statement, Paulo Pianez, Carrefour sustainability and corporate responsibility director in Brazil, stated: “With this commitment, we are taking another important step towards promoting sustainability in our supply chain. We understand that as a retailer we have the role of creating a valuable link between the consumer and the production chain, collaborating to promote significant changes in consumption habits.”

Maria Fernanda Martin, animal welfare specialist for HSI Farm Animals in Brazil, said: “We applaud Carrefour for becoming the first supermarket chain in Brazil to pledge to sell only cage-free eggs, and we look forward to continuing to work with the company and its egg suppliers on the implementation of this policy. This move will relieve millions of egg-laying hens from a life of extreme confinement and sends a clear message to the egg industry in Brazil that the future of egg production is cage-free.”

Egg-laying hens in Brazil are typically confined for their whole lives in wire cages so small that they cannot even fully stretch their wings. Cage-free production systems typically offer hens higher levels of welfare, allowing the birds to express more of their natural behaviors, including moving around, laying eggs in nests, perching, and fully spreading their wings. HSI works together with the food industry in Brazil and worldwide to help ensure a successful transition to these higher animal welfare production systems, through farm tours, technical workshops on cage-free systems, and the exchange of best practices.

Carrefour joins other food corporations that have committed to sourcing exclusively cage-free eggs in Brazil and throughout Latin America. Nestlé, the largest food company in the world, and Unilever have committed to a global cage-free egg supply chain by 2025. After working with HSI, Burger King and Arcos Dorados, which operates McDonald’s in Brazil and 19 other countries in the region, committed to switching to 100 percent cage-free eggs, as did other restaurant operators, accounting for thousands of restaurants in Brazil and Latin America. Brazil’s leading food service companies, including Compass Group (GRSA), Sodexo, Sapore, and Grupo Lemos Passos also announced cage-free egg policies in partnership with HSI. Alsea, the largest restaurant operator in Latin America and Spain, and Grupo Bimbo, the world’s largest bakery company, announced their cage-free egg policies after several years of talks with HSI specialists. Other leading food and hospitality companies such as Kraft-Heinz, International Meal Company (IMC), Cargill, Brazil Fast Food Corporation (BFFC), Subway, Intercontinental Hotels Group, AccorHotels, Marriott International, Hilton Worldwide, Giraffas, Barilla, Divino Fogão, Habib’s, Grupo CRM, and Bauducco have also pledged to go cage-free in Brazil. Take action and donate to help chickens and other animals.

Media contact: Maria Fernanda Martin, mfmartin@hsi.org, +55 (11) 9 5770 9922

International actress Pearl Thusi and HSI/Africa expose the ugly truth behind the “Snuggle Scam”

Humane Society International


  • Actress Pearl Thusi with a wild lion in the background at a protected reserve in South Africa. Audrey Delsink/HSI/Africa

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CAPE TOWN—South African actress and wildlife advocate Pearl Thusi is collaborating with Humane Society International/Africa to warn residents and especially travellers to South Africa not to visit tourist attractions that offer lion cub petting and lion walks. These facilities breed lions in captivity, often under harsh conditions, exploit them for photo opps, and then sell them for canned hunts or for Asia’s lion-bone trade. South Africa is a popular tourist destination that welcomed approximately 10.3 million foreign tourists and facilitated 17.2 million domestic tourism trips in 2017 (South Africa Tourism Report 2017).

Thusi, who appeared in The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency and Quantico, and HSI/Africa launched their Snuggle Scam awareness-raising campaign today, on World Lion Day, with video of Thusi’s visit to a lion cub-petting and lion walk tourist attraction in Gauteng. The actress witnessed first-hand how easily well-meaning travellers can be hoodwinked into financing the cruel captive-breeding lion industry. HSI/Africa then took Thusi on safari, where she could see lions roaming free in the wild.

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“I’m so humbled and proud to be a part of the HSI family,” said Thusi. “It’s been my life’s dream to make a change for wild animals and be part of the system that loves, appreciates and protects them. I pledge to do my best to learn, grow and fight for the rights of Africa’s wild lion and all animals that need the same assistance. Now that I know the truth behind the captive lion breeding industry and the sad exploitation of these lions from birth to death, I am horrified that this is how we treat the king of the jungle. We should promote Africa as an authentic, wild and rewarding tourism destination and not support this industry. I know that together we can all make a difference and improve things for wildlife and humanity.”

Breeders at tourist attractions that feature human-lion interaction often claim that the lions are orphaned and will be released back into the wild. The truth is that they are bred in captivity, removed from their mother, and have no ability to survive in their natural habitat. Lions imprinted on humans are dangerous and unpredictable.

In the wild, lion cubs remain with their mothers for 18 months, and females rest for at least 15-24 months between litters. Cubs born on breeding farms are taken from their mothers when they are a few days or even hours old to be used as living photo props. The removal of cubs forces the mother into an exhausting and continuous breeding cycle while incarcerated in enclosures, sometimes without adequate food, hygiene, or the ability to express their natural behaviours.

Fake “orphan” cubs are exploited for unsuspecting visitors, and volunteers from all over the world pay thousands of dollars to hand-raise them. Once cubs are no longer cute and cuddly, they are used for walking experiences. Once they are too dangerous for that activity, some are sold for canned hunts, in which they are shot by trophy hunters in fenced areas from which they cannot escape. Others are killed for the bone trade—either for display or for use in bogus medicinal tonics in Asia.

Audrey Delsink, Acting Executive Director and Wildlife Director of HSI/Africa said, “Most people come to South Africa because they love lions and other wild animals. They would be shocked to learn that the cute lion cubs they pose with for selfies will one day be killed for profit. We are thrilled to work with Pearl to raise awareness of the ‘Snuggle Scam,’ to urge people to stay away from these facilities, and instead to see these magnificent animals in the wild where they belong.”

Key facts:

  • Only about 20,000 lions remain in the wild in Africa.
  • Between 6,000 and 8,000 lions are suffering in captivity in some 260 facilities across South Africa, marketed to tourists as lion interaction experiences. With fewer than 3,000 wild lions, South Africa has more lions languishing in captivity than in the wild.
  • Lions are a threatened species, listed as Vulnerable by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN). While the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) prohibits the trade of bones from wild lions, it does allow South Africa to export bones from captive ones.
  • It is impossible to differentiate body parts from wild vs. captive lions, so the legal export of captive lion bones facilitates the illegal export of wild lion bones.
  • It is difficult to distinguish between lion and tiger bone, so the legal trade in captive lion bones also undermines efforts to stop the trade in tiger bones, which is completely illegal.

The “Snuggle Scam” initiative comes in the wake of South Africa’s announcement that it would nearly double its lion bone export quota from 800 to 1,500 skeletons, and as the South African parliament prepares to host a colloquium on captive lion breeding on August 22-23.

On #WorldLionDay, HSI and Pearl Thusi urge travellers, travel guides, and tour operators to fight lion exploitation by refusing to participate in or promote human-lion interactions, such as bottle-feeding or cub-petting, walking with lions, or canned trophy hunting. Visit www.hsi.org/bloodlions for more information. Take action and donate to help.

Photos and video: https://newsroom.humanesociety.org/fetcher/index.php?searchMerlin=1&searchBrightcove=1&submitted=1&mw=d&q=Lions0818

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Humane Society International


SAN JOSÉ, Costa Rica—Today concludes a week of training for more than 60 officials of the Judicial Investigation Agency (Organismo de Investigación Judicial, or OIJ), the federal department responsible for enforcing the anti-cruelty law in Costa Rica. Humane Society International/Latin America and the OIJ held training sessions to help officials enforce animal protection Law No. 9458, which reforms the country’s penal code by establishing prison sentences for cruelty to animals, including dog fighting.

Training topics included background on animal fights and their relationship to other serious crimes, investigating allegations and recognizing evidence of dogfighting and cockfighting, and studying cases such as animal neglect, puppy mills, and extreme cruelty. The training is part of an effort to help the OIJ comply with Law 9458 and increase the number of cruelty cases prosecuted in the country. It was led by Adam Parascandola, HSI’s Director of Animal Protection and Crisis Response, and Janette Reever, HSI’s Global Specialist on Dogfighting, Animal Protection, and Crisis Response.

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HSI’s experts also trained officers on different ways to collect evidence appropriately, maintaining the chain of custody, and correct handling of confiscated animals. They emphasized that animal abuse is often an indicator of a violent person who can commit to other criminal acts, such as drug trafficking and domestic violence. The last day of the workshop featured a crime scene simulation, in which the officers were able to implement everything they learned during the week.

Amanda Chaves, program manager of Companion Animals for HSI/Latin America, highlighted the importance of support from authorities and society in general for the new law. “We reiterate our commitment to continue fighting against animal cruelty in Costa Rica. We are grateful for the priority that the Government has given animal welfare and we are proud to contribute to the implementation of the law. We urge citizens to file complaints and work together to eradicate animal abuse in this country.”

All officials trained in the workshops will return to their jobs better able to identify animals that have been used for fighting. They will act with greater expertise when animals are in danger and can coordinate better with the appropriate entities to rescue animals in cruelty situations. Donate to help animals worldwide.

Media contact: Amanda Chavez, Gerente del Programa de Animales de Compañía de HSI/Latinoamérica, (+506) 7018-4621, achavez@hsi.org

Humane Society International





  • HSI

HYDERABAD—Responding to a complaint of a sick and injured dog wandering in Meerpet, Humane Society International/India found three adult Great Danes in a shocking state of neglect. Upon investigation, the rescue team found out that a local man used the dogs to breed puppies, which he then sold.

Apoorva Katpatal, Cruelty Response Manager, HSI/India, said, “The owner of the dogs was carrying out illegal breeding in his backyard for a long time. Apparently, the dogs stopped breeding a couple of months ago, after showing signs of ill health. Since they were no longer commercially profitable to him, the owner abandoned them, leaving them to forage for food in the garbage. Sadly, these dogs had never received any basic medical attention, and, given their poor condition, they cannot be expected to survive on the streets. They would eventually succumb to illness or starvation.”

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HSI/India took the three Great Danes for emergency veterinary attention, where they were diagnosed with a host of health concerns, including suspected bone cancer, open and infected sores, parasite infestation, and severe malnourishment. HSI/India is committed to helping the dogs fully recover before they are transferred to groups that will place them for adoption.

N.G. Jayasimha, managing director of HSI/India, said, “The vast majority of puppies sold in pet stores in India come from illegal breeders who raise dogs in appalling conditions. We are working tirelessly to educate consumers about the benefits of adopting dogs instead of purchasing them in pet stores.”

The illegal breeder has voluntarily relinquished the Great Danes, admitting his inability to care for them. He promised authorities that he will not resume dog breeding. According to residents in the area, the owner had “disposed of” seven other dogs over the past few months. In all probability, they were re-sold to another illegal breeder.

HSI/India works with local partner organisations across India to rescue animals from neglect, illegal breeding, and hoarding situations, providing treatment and care to these abused animals. HSI also campaigns for stronger dog breeding rules and works to ensure that those rules are enforced. Donate to help dogs and other animals worldwide.

Media contact: Neelam Naseeb, +91 920 5104695, nnaseeb@hsi.org

Humane Society International


  • Dog Meat-Free Indonesia

JAKARTA— Campaigners with the Dog Meat-Free Indonesia coalition are celebrating a major breakthrough in their efforts to end the brutally cruel dog and cat meat trades, following a national government pledge to ban the trades. The DMFI comprising local and international groups Animal Friends Jogja, Jakarta Animal Aid Network, Change For Animals Foundation, Humane Society International and Four Paws, have exposed the suffering of the dog and cat meat trade through shocking nationwide investigations where dogs and cats were filmed being bludgeoned to death and blowtorched alive, as well as exposed the routine theft of pet dogs and the rabies risk the trade poses to locals and tourists alike.

The announcement came at a “National Coordination of Animal Welfare” meeting in Jakarta held on August 1st and 2nd by the Directorate of Veterinary Public and attended by national and regional government representatives. At the close of the meeting, all national participants agreed to issue a ban on the trade of dog and cat meat in Indonesia and to prohibit the issuance of health certification for dog and cat meat for human consumption.

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This agreement comes just days after campaigners from the Dog Meat Free Indonesia coalition issued a public warning that millions of global tourists could be at risk of exposure to the deadly rabies virus spread by the county’s illegal dog and cat meat trade, and just two weeks before the country hosts the 18th Asian Games, when some three million tourists are expected to visit the capital city of Jakarta. In January the DMFI also coordinated a letter to President Joko Widodo calling for urgent action and signed by over 90 national and international celebrities including Cameron Diaz, Chelsea Islan, Dr. Jane Goodall, DBE, Sophia Latjuba, Simon Cowell and Ellen DeGeneres. DMFI’s global petition has also been signed by over 930,000 people from around the world.

“The extreme cruelty of Indonesia’s dog and cat meat trades is intolerable under both Indonesia and international animal welfare standards, and the government is right to be concerned about the impacts of these trades on its international reputation. With our growing awareness of animal sentience comes a greater responsibility to protect animals from cruelty. Customs evolve and the nationwide movement from within Indonesia calling for an end to these trades is proof that Indonesia is ready to banish the dog meat trade to the history books of shame and illegality. This latest announcement will be celebrated globally!” – Lola Webber, Director at Change For Animals Foundation.

“Given the growing evidence of the risk the trade poses to rabies transmission, coupled with the evidence of animal cruelty and illegality, the international community wholeheartedly welcomes and applauds this groundbreaking development in Indonesia.” – Katherine Polak, FOUR PAWS.

“We greatly appreciate the government’s initiative, especially the Directorate of Veterinary Public Health, for hosting this important meeting to discuss a number of animal welfare issues including the dog and cat meat trade, and applaud the huge progress that is being made. Finally, the government acknowledges that the cruelty of the dog and cat meat trade is unacceptable and must be stopped.” – Karin Franken, Jakarta Animal Aid Network.

“This is such a victory for Indonesia and the Indonesian government has given us hope and motivation to collaborate with the government. We are one step closer to a dog and cat meat-free Indonesia!” – Bobby Fernando of Animal Friends Jogja.

“The dog and cat meat trade is utterly brutal, a risk to human health and largely fueled by crime, so we applaud the Indonesian government for pledging to end the trade following our DMFI investigations. We hope that this bold step will send a strong message to other countries across Asia, such as China, South Korea, India and Vietnam where 30 million dogs and 10 million cats suffer unimaginable cruelty for the meat trade, many of them stolen pets. We stand ready to work with the Indonesian authorities to implement a robust ban, end the slaughter, and bring us one step closer to shutting down these dreadful trades for good.” – Kitty Block, President, Humane Society International.

The meeting in Jakarta last week was attended by all representatives of livestock and animal health departments, animal quarantine agencies, veterinary faculty academics, the Indonesian Veterinary Medical Association and several non-governmental organizations from all provinces in Indonesia.

Mr Syamsul Ma’arif DVM , M.Si , Director of veterinary public health warned of the impacts the dog meat trade is having on animal welfare and described the trade as “torture for animals” after reviewing DMFI’s investigation footage. He also cited the risk the trade poses to Indonesia’s international reputation, warning that “foreign countries find a low standard of animal welfare and cruelty unacceptable and will stop visiting Indonesia which is very bad for our tourism.” He added that “dog meat or any animal that is not registered as farm animals, is illegal” and that the way in which the dogs were handled and transported alone were a violation of animal welfare and must be stopped.

Indonesia’s tourism industry has already experienced the impact of international outrage when in June 2017, investigations in Bali exposed the horrors of the tourist island’s hidden dog meat trade. Tourists were unknowingly being sold dog meat under the guise of chicken satay. Further global outrage occurred in January 2018 following the DMFI’s exposé of Tomohon Market – described by DMFI investigators as “walking through hell” – which resulted in TripAdvisor removing its promotions of the city’s market stating that, “We have investigated the TripAdvisor listing page for Tomohon Extreme Market and concluded that it does not meet the standards set by our listings policy. As a result, we have permanently removed the listing from both our site and our app.”

The results of this national meeting will be used as a recommendation for the Ministry of Agriculture to formulate a PERMENTAN (Minister of Agriculture regulations) regarding the ban on trade in dog and cat meat and that of exotic animals in Indonesia. Donate and take action to help.

Download broadcast quality video footage and photos: www.dogmeatfreeindonesia.org/resources/rabies-and-dog-theft

ENDS

MEDIA CONTACT DETAILS:

DMFI Campaign Coordinator/ Change for Animals Foundation Director: Lolawebber@changeforanimals.org; Tel. +62 813 3740 8768

Jakarta Animal Aid Network (JAAN) Co-Founder/ Programmes Director: Karin Franken (Jakarta, Indonesia): jaan_adopt@yahoo.com; Tel. +62 82122487794

Animal Friends Jogja (AFJ) Programmes Director: Bobby Fernando (Yogyakarta, Indonesia) animalfriendsjogja@gmail.com; Tel. +62 8562930912

Humane Society International (HSI) Director International Media: Wendy Higgins (London, UK): whiggins@hsi.org

HSI/ Latin America participated in surveillance post to check the health of animals that accompanied their owners on the pilgrimage.

Humane Society International


  • HSI

  • HSI

  • HSI

  • HSI

SAN JOSÉ, Costa Rica—Humane Society International / Latin America, as a member of the National Animal Welfare Advisory Council (CONABA) of Costa Rica, participated in one of the four control posts that the National Animal Health Service (SENASA) placed in strategic places for those attending the annual pilgrimage to the Basilica of the Virgin of Los Angeles in the cities of San Pedro, Curridabat, Ochomogo and Cartago on August 1 and 2, 2018.

HSI/Latin America was present in the Municipality of Curridabat for 12 hours straight, collaborating together with volunteers and veterinarians who helped verify and ensure that all animals that accompanied their owners to the pilgrimage, would obligatorily make a stop at the control post and get their health checked before continuing with their course.

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In total, 51 lost or abandoned animals were rescued at the “Rescue Center Romeritos” in the province of Cartago. The government authorities of SENASA together with other animal welfare associations from CONABA attended animals that were found lost or abandoned by their owners only in the area around the city. The animals were treated for conditions due to long periods without rest during the pilgrimage, wounds on their foot pads, and several of them were found with severe dehydration and heat stroke. In these cases, the animals were confiscated from their owners and placed on temporary custody until the owners can claim them.

Amanda Chaves, Program Manager of Companion Animal of HSI/Latin America, highlighted the importance of these posts, as they prevent the suffering of pets that are subjected to these walks or to abandonment. “We are honored to work hand in hand with the Costa Rican Government to ensure the welfare of animals in Costa Rica. We congratulate SENASA for its excellent work during the Pilgrimage and we maintain our commitment to continue working together with the entities in charge of combating crimes against animals and help them develop their capacity to deal with them.” Give now to help animals.

Media Contact: Amanda Chaves, achaves@hsi.org, (+506) 7018-4621

HSI signs agreements with state Biodiversity Institute and Environmental Attorney General

Humane Society International


  • Milan Klusacek/istock

CHETUMAL—Humane Society International, a leading animal welfare organization, signed agreements with the Biodiversity Institute and the Environmental Attorney General of Quintana Roo State in Mexico to set up anti-cruelty training programs and enhance capacity to respond to reports of animal cruelty.

Anton Aguilar, director of HSI/Mexico, said, “These agreements show that Quintana Roo State authorities are prioritizing the fight against animal cruelty. They build on a series of programs that we are developing to work with local authorities in Mexico, to create a culture of respect and care towards animals. We congratulate Mr. Alfredo Arellano Guillermo, minister of the environment; Mr. Miguel Ángel Nadal, environmental attorney general; and Ms. Elvira Carbajal, head of the Biodiversity Institute of Quintana Roo, for their commitment to animal care.”

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The first training events for government officials will take place next week, focusing on animal welfare legislation, animal behavior, and response to animal cruelty cases. HSI will supplement its training programs with a local animal welfare awareness campaign focused on the prevention of animal abuse.

Media Contact: Magaly Garabay, (+52 55) 5211 8731, ext. 104, mgaribay@idee.agency

Interior Secretary Zinke illegally stacked panel with insiders who profit from hunting imperiled animals

Humane Society International


  • Cathy Smith

Washington, DC— Conservation and animal protection groups sued the Trump administration today for illegally establishing the “International Wildlife Conservation Council,” an advisory panel stacked with people who have personal or financial interests in killing or importing rare or endangered animals from overseas. Federal law requires government advisory panels to be balanced and not improperly influenced by special interests.

Today’s lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court by Democracy Forward on behalf of the Natural Resources Defense Council, the Center for Biological Diversity, the Humane Society of the United States and Humane Society International, asserts that Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service flagrantly violated federal law by appointing a council packed with trophy hunters firearm executives and representatives of businesses with close ties to the Trump administration.

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“Elephants, rhinos, and lions face enough threats without the U.S. government giving the cover of credibility to trophy hunters peddling the self-serving notion that killing endangered species constitutes a legitimate strategy for conserving them,” said Natural Resources Defense Council senior attorney Zak Smith. “If we have to sue to get our government to listen to wildlife conservation experts, we’re happy to do so.” Smith is also director of NRDC’s Wildlife Trade Initiative.

The IWCC is designed to promote the “removal of barriers” to trophy imports. Zinke, however, has refused to include conservation experts on the council, instead selecting trophy hunters and representatives of financially conflicted business interests. Four of the 17 council members had signed on to host a “Camouflage and Cufflinks” inaugural ball last year, soliciting millions of dollars in campaign contributions.

“Zinke’s thrill-kill council is unethical and illegal, and apparently that’s just fine with him,” said Tanya Sanerib, international program legal director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “These people kill imperiled animals for fun. They have no business making policy decisions about wildlife imports and we’re hopeful that the courts will agree.”

Trump called big game hunting a “horror show” in 2017, just weeks after his Fish and Wildlife Service abandoned an Obama-era ban on importing elephant trophies and sanctioned the hunting of lions in several countries. According to a Humane Society International report, trophy hunting has caused the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of animals since 2005.

“The public’s interest is not served by using taxpayer dollars to host meetings of wealthy trophy hunters to hatch plans to minimize governmental oversight of their unethical hobby,” said Anna Frostic, managing wildlife attorney for the Humane Society of the United States. “The Department of the Interior has failed to provide a rational justification for establishing the IWCC, and we are asking the federal court to revoke the council’s charter.”

“By establishing a council with the sole purpose of promoting the overseas hobby of trophy hunting, Secretary Zinke is breaking the law,” said Democracy Forward Executive Director Anne Harkavy. “Contrary to the committee’s own name, Secretary Zinke has failed to include any conservation biologists or others with expertise in advising on wildlife conservation policy.” Take action and donate to help.

Independent survey shows sharp decline in street dog breeding

Humane Society International


  • HSI

  • HSI

  • HSI

Nainital—Humane Society International/India, with the help of Nagar Palika Parishad, Nainital and the participation of Nainital city residents, has successfully sterilized and vaccinated 279 street dogs in less than two months.

The purpose of the drive was to conduct Animal Birth Control and Anti-Rabies Vaccination on dogs who were missed during the last drive in 2017. There was a variety of factors that left some dogs untreated- young age, inoperability or difficulty getting to the animals due to rough terrain. Of the 279 dogs, there are 208 female dogs and 71 male dogs.

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This is the second phase of the drive undertaken in Nainital in the past two years, with the first phase completed in a three-month period ending in July 2017. In the first phase, 836 dogs were sterilized, of which 518 were female dogs and 318 male dogs.

Dr. Simranjeet Singh, veterinarian and team leader with HSI/India, says, “We were delighted with the pace at which the program was executed. The residents of Nainital have been extremely helpful by identifying unsterilized dogs. Sterilization and vaccination is the only solution to controlling the street dog population. Anyone can identify a sterilized and vaccinated dog by the notch on his or her left ear.”

Important Figures and Facts:

1. HSI/India began conducting bi-annual Index Count Surveys in Nainital in 2016, when the Dog Population Management Program was introduced.
2. A total of 1,115 dogs have been sterilized and vaccinated in Nainital as a result of the two drives
3. In the last Index survey conducted in May 2018, 76.7 percent of dogs were recorded sterilized.
4. In October 2016, 12.2 percent of dogs observed in Naintial Town were pups and 29.4 percent were lactating females, while in October 2017, only 4.6 of dogs observed were pups and 6.0 were lactating females, showing a sharp decline in street dog breeding.
5. HSI/ India has also conducted awareness sessions in Nainital on the importance of sterilization and vaccinations.
6. Sterilization and vaccination is a proven technique used worldwide to establish harmonious dog-human co-existence and reduce the incidence of rabies.
7. As mandated by law, dogs picked up from a particular location are dropped back to the same location. This is done in an error-free manner using a GPS-based application.

Media Contact: Simran Dhaliwal | 8980266688 | sdhaliwal@hsi.org

The Dog Meat-Free Indonesia coalition warns of dangers of illicit dog and cat meat trade as evidence mounts of rabies-positive dogs in the trade

Humane Society International


  • Dog Meat-Free Indonesia

JAKARTA—Campaigners from the Dog Meat-Free Indonesia coalition warn that millions of global tourists could be at risk of exposure to the deadly rabies virus spread by the county’s illegal dog and cat meat trade. The latest evidence concerning rabies risk comes in the form of a rabies-positive dog carcass found being sold for human consumption in a North Sulawesi market. The DMFI says Indonesia’s central and provincial governments have failed to act despite mounting evidence of the dangers the trade poses to public health and safety.

Earlier this year, DMFI exposés of shocking animal cruelty at North Sulawesi’s markets, and dogs being inhumanely bound, gagged and thrown onto trucks for journeys lasting days, sparked a global outcry. The scenes of animal suffering led to the submission of a DMFI letter to President Joko Widodo signed by over 90 global and Indonesian celebrities including Cameron Diaz, Chelsea Islan, Dame Jane Goodall, Simon Cowell and Ellen DeGeneres, calling for urgent action to protect animals.

Call to ban Indonesia’s dog meat trade.

There is also increasing concern among Indonesian citizens at the lack of action by law enforcement officials to deter or punish gangs of thieves who terrorise neighbourhoods and steal dogs and cats from back yards and houses. Jakarta Animal Aid Network says it receives countless reports each week from devastated pet owners who have had their dogs stolen by armed dog thieves.

Merry, a resident of Tomohon City describes her ordeal: “I saw it happen through the upstairs window. The dog was eating cyanide, while the thief was waiting for the dog. We couldn’t go outside. The thief was armed and ready, with rocks, arrows, a machete inside the car. While I was opening my door, the thief tried to fire an arrow at me.”

Febri Verawati from Jakarta, says: ”I had my dog Neiro from a one month old puppy and we lived together for seven years. When he was stolen, I was so devastated and heartbroken. I just can’t stop thinking about it. After it happened, the vegetable vendors who had witnessed it told me there were two men on a bike very early in the morning. They actually jumped over the fence, grabbed Neiro, put him in a sack and drove off. They said the dog thieves had been asking around about which houses had dogs.”

The dog meat trade in Indonesia operates in breach of disease control regulations put in place to curb the spread of fatal zoonotic diseases such as rabies, despite the government’s pledge to eliminate the disease by 2020. Rabies is endemic in 25 out of 34 of Indonesia’s provinces, and dogs of unknown disease status are routinely transported across provincial borders and islands, in clear breach of the law. With little sign of law enforcement action, the thieves and traders appear immune to punishment.

A DMFI investigation in May this year revealed the presence of a rabies-positive dog carcass at the infamous Tomohon Market. The carcass was tested at the provincial government’s diagnostic laboratory, following the random sampling of just nine slaughtered dogs from markets in Minahasa regency, Manado and Tomohon. The DMFI believes that such a high hit rate is consistent with earlier published studies in Indonesia and throughout Asia documenting the prevalence of rabies-positive dogs for sale in markets. For example, in 2007, research conducted in markets in North Sulawesi (Manado, Airmadidi and Langowan) demonstrated that between 7.8 percent and 10.6 percent of dogs being sold for human consumption were infected with rabies.

“With over 200 markets selling dogs and cats for meat in North Sulawesi alone, the scale of the problem is potentially catastrophic for Indonesia’s attempts to eliminate rabies, and gravely jeopardises the health and safety of its citizens and animals. This latest finding should serve as a very loud wake-up call that action is needed to tackle this illegal, cruel and dangerous trade.” explains Lola Webber, co-founder of Change For Animals Foundation.

The DMFI has released video evidence of dogs being stolen from the streets and rice fields in rural West Java, where rabies is endemic, and driven to slaughterhouses in Jakarta, despite the capital city’s strict dog and cat importation regulations to safeguard its rabies-free status. Campaigners are concerned that Indonesia has not learned the lessons of the past, when the popular holiday destination of Bali experienced a rabies outbreak in 2008 following the introduction of a single rabies-infected dog on a fishing boat.

“This should be of grave concern to the government given that Jakarta worked hard and invested significantly for many years to secure the city’s rabies-free status, and given that this trade is totally illegal. We know that it only takes one dog to create an outbreak, with devastating consequences. In Jakarta it is estimated that just one percent of the population partakes in dog meat consumption, but this one percent jeopardises the safety of the whole city and its population of 10 million residents.” warns Karin Franken, director at Jakarta Animal Aid Network.

Professor Louis Nel of Global Alliance for Rabies Control agrees, saying: “We may not be able to easily change culture or habit, but we should ensure compliance with proven animal disease prevention measures and stop the smuggling of dogs, to limit the spread of rabies, an endemic disease across Asia. These traders are driven solely by profit and are disregarding the risks to human and animal health.”

These warnings reflect those from the World Health Organisation that has explicitly highlighted the trade in dogs for human consumption as a contributing factor to the spread of rabies in Indonesia. In a letter to the DMFI coalition, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of the United States says: “There are reports that dog-meat markets have a higher rate of rabies than the general dog population, as people often sell dogs to the markets when they act sick; some of these sick dogs have rabies.… Furthermore, there are at least three published reports of humans acquiring rabies from activities associated with the dog meat market, emphasizing that the risk is very real.”

The risk to tourists is unknown, but campaigners believe that travelers may unwittingly expose themselves to rabies and other diseases by visiting the animal markets where dogs and cats are slaughtered and butchered in the streets in unsanitary conditions. In December 2017 the travel site TripAdvisor removed its promotion of North Sulawesi’s live animal markets following DMFI’s investigations. TripAdvisor had previously listed the markets as “#7 out of 12 things to do in Tomohon” but later stated “We have investigated the TripAdvisor listing page for Tomohon Extreme Market and concluded that it does not meet the standards set by our listings policy. As a result, we have permanently removed the listing from both our site and our app.”

An estimated 12 million tourists visit Indonesia each year—including over 1 million Australians, and an estimated 360,000 from the United Kingdom, 330,000 from the United States, and between 200,000 and 260,000 each from the Netherlands, Germany and France. “Traditional markets” selling live cats, dogs and other animals for slaughter, as well as the consumption of dog and cat meat, are often promoted by local tour guides. Unbeknown to most tourists, such meat has not undergone any safety or hygiene checks and is essentially unregulated, and both the US Centers for Disease Control and the World Health Organisation warn that “consuming meat from rabies-suspect animals is not advised”.

“Governments around the world should be issuing warnings to their nationals who are visiting Indonesia of the dangers of the dog and cat meat trade and the live markets, despite some local tour operators promoting them as “must see” places and experiences,” states Dr. Katherine Polak of FOUR PAWS.

“Indonesia is a country of world-renowned natural beauty, but its international reputation is marred by the ugly brutality of its dog and cat meat trade. With the volume of dogs being smuggled for the trade, and the unsanitary slaughter at markets, it’s a genuine concern that innocent travelers could be exposing themselves to dangerous and even deadly diseases. The lack of government action to crack down on this trade is certainly calling into question Indonesia’s position as a prime tourist destination,” states Kitty Block, president of Humane Society International.

“This is not a debate about culture or ‘custom’, this is an issue of animal cruelty and human health. The trade we are seeing in Indonesia is profit-driven and is not motivated by any desire to maintain a culture. The cruelty is unforgiveable and the global community is united in our calls for the central and provincial governments to take action to tackle the dog and cat meat trade as it poses grave threat to human and animal health, encourages illegal activity, and tarnishes Indonesia’s reputation.”– Bobby Fernando of Animal Friends Jogja.

Additional Information:

  • It is estimated that just 7 percent of Indonesia’s population consume dog meat, but in a country with the fourth largest population in the world at 261 million people, this amounts to a significant trade and a booming business in some parts of the country.
  • Indonesia also has the world’s 5th largest number of human rabies deaths in Asia each year, a fatal disease with devastating societal and economic impacts. It is no coincidence that the provinces and regencies with the greatest demand for dog meat are also those with the highest prevalence of rabies.
  • The trade in dogs for human consumption is in direct contravention of rabies control and elimination recommendations by key health advisory bodies, (including the World Health Organisation, the Pan American Health Organization and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations), and in breach of national disease control and prevention regulations.
  • There is an ever-growing animal protection movement in Indonesia and the Dog Meat Free-Indonesia coalition supports these groups by coordinating days of action where thousands of animal lovers take to the streets calling for an end to the dog meat trade.
  • Over 900,000 people from around the world have already signed the DMFI petition (www.dogmeatfreeindonesia.org/take-action)

ENDS

Media contact: Wendy Higgins, whiggins@hsi.org, +44 (0)7989 972 423

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