When: Saturday, November 23, 2024 at 8 a.m.
Where: Jalan Putra, 50350, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
More information and registration coming soon!
Humane Society International
When: Saturday, November 23, 2024 at 8 a.m.
Where: Jalan Putra, 50350, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
More information and registration coming soon!
Humane Society International / India
Despite being illegal in India, thousands of dogs are killed each year for the dog meat trade. HSI/India exposed this cruelty with shocking video footage from the Northeastern state of Nagaland, where more than 30,000 street dogs and stolen pets are captured, slaughtered and sold in live markets annually.
The dog meat trade in India is exceptionally brutal. Dogs are taken from the streets, and pets are stolen from their communities to supply the trade. The dogs are tied up in jute sacks with only their heads exposed, their mouths either tightly bound or stitched shut to keep them silent. They are then transported many miles to markets on the back of trucks. During the transport, the dogs remain confined in these sacks, deprived of movement, food, and water. Once they reach the market they are displayed in the sack and await slaughter. The killing methods are gruesome, with dogs being clubbed to death out of public view but in full view of other dogs.
Although India’s Food Safety and Standards Act 2006 and associated regulations make the dog meat trade and consumption illegal, the practice persists in some states in India mostly in the Northeastern states.
HSI/India is actively working to end the consumption of dog meat in India, with a particular focus on Nagaland in 2024-2025, where there is increasing support for a dog meat ban. A ban was introduced in Nagaland in 2020 but was overturned by the Kohima High Court in May 2023 following challenges from dog meat traders.
As well as lobbying for re-enactment of the ban, HSI/India’s efforts are centered on stopping the sale of live dogs and dog meat in Nagaland markets, reducing the number of vendors involved by providing alternative livelihood options (many traders are women forced into the trade due to poverty), and curbing the smuggling of dogs from Assam, a primary supply source. Additionally, HSI/India will be working with local organizations and enforcement agencies to strengthen their ability to enforce existing regulations that could effectively reduce the trade.
Humane Society International / United Kingdom
Glue traps, also known as glue or sticky boards, are trays coated with an extremely strong adhesive. Any animal who touches one becomes stuck and cannot escape.
Depending on how frequently the trap is checked, animals can be stuck anywhere from hours to days. Trapped animals struggle to free themselves, some rodents break bones and tear off, or even bite through, their own limbs in a desperate attempt to free themselves. Most often death comes from a combination of exhaustion and dehydration.
Glue traps are indiscriminate. Non-target animals have become trapped, including protected species like wild birds and bats, hedgehogs, fox cubs and even pet cats. The Scottish Animal Welfare Commission has concluded that there is “an undeniable risk of capture of non-target species”.
Advocacy efforts by HSI and other groups have been successful in bringing about legislation to ban or regulate the use and sale of glue traps. Legislation to ban the use and/or sale of glue traps is in place in several countries, including England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, New Zealand, the Australian state of Victoria and Iceland. We want to see a complete ban on the sale and use of these cruel, indiscriminate and indefensible traps, due to the suffering they cause to animals. Read our Humane Society International/UK report, ‘The Case for a UK Ban on Rodent Glue Traps’.
There are non-lethal ways of dealing with unwanted rodent visitors that are not only more humane, but also far more effective in the long-term, too. Read more about humane rodent solutions.
Several countries have already acted to ban or regulate the sale and use of glue traps on animal welfare grounds.
Although glue trap use is banned in Scotland, Wales and England (unless under licence in England), they are still commonly found for sale in shops and online. Not only is anyone who uses a glue trap or sticky board at risk from prosecution, they are also condemning animals to a slow and painful death.
Thank you for taking a stand to help animals and for supporting our campaign to end the sale and use of glue traps!
Humane Society International / Europe
The protection of animals is an issue close to the hearts of millions of EU citizens. This is also reflected in the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, which explicitly recognises that animals are sentient beings and that the EU and Member States must pay full regard to their welfare requirements in their policymaking.
Humane Society International/Europe is calling on the 720 Members of the European Parliament to become advocates for farmed, wild and laboratory animals to advance their welfare and improve their protection in the EU and beyond during the upcoming Tenth Parliamentary Term (2024-2029).
You can find detailed information about our asks for the next term of the European Parliament in our Manifesto.
Below are a few of our key priorities:
The existing body of EU animal welfare legislation must be revised to fully reflect current scientific understandings of animal welfare and its scope expanded to cover all animals kept for economic purposes. It is imperative that this legislative revision includes the phasing-out of all caged confinement for farm animals, such as laying hens and pigs.
A full ban on the keeping, breeding and killing of animals for the sole purpose of fur production must be introduced. The cruel and unnecessary practice of fur farming must be relegated to the annals of history everywhere in Europe.
EU Member States are currently only required to issue import permits for hunting trophies from species listed on Annex A and just twelve species on Annex B of the EU Wildlife Trade Regulations. For as long as the import of hunting trophies remains legal, this import requirement must be extended to ALL species listed in Annex B to ensure that these hunting trophies are of legal and ‘sustainable’ origin.
A loophole in EU legislation allows nationally protected wild animal species, trafficked into international trade flows, to be sold legally in Europe as exotic pets. The EU must commit to adopting supplementary legislation that prohibits the importation, transhipment, purchase, and sale of wildlife taken illegally in the country of harvest/origin.
The EU chemicals legislation (REACH) must be revised to close loopholes that allow testing of cosmetic ingredients. Both REACH and the regulation for chemicals classification, labelling, and packaging (CLP) must be updated to maximise adoption non-animal methods for safety assessment and it is crucial that no new or expanded animal testing requirements are introduced via revisions or delegated acts. In research, where the largest number of animals are used in experiments, the EU should commit to a scientific and technological shift towards non-animal approaches.
EU policymaking, including any future Sustainable Food Systems Framework Law, should actively promote the transition to a more plant-based diet and a decrease in the production and consumption of animal products, as well as introducing measures to reduce the number of farmed animals in production and their stocking densities, to mitigate the environmental and climate impacts of intensive animal agriculture.
Humane Society International / United Kingdom
“We just can’t justify putting sows in farrowing crates any more.” – a British farm manager shares insights into the impact of confinement for sows, and perspective on how the sector must change
HSI/UK made contact with a British pig farm, which wishes to remain anonymous. The farm has used farrowing crates for over 35 years but the farm manager now believes that farmers should be supported financially to stop using crates, because of the suffering they cause. This is the testimony of the farm manager, who wants the public and politicians to understand the tragic impact crate confinement has on these intelligent animals. The farm agreed for HSI/UK to re-home two sows at the end of what the industry considers their productive breeding lives, in order for their stories and experiences to be understood.
Why are farrowing crates used?
Farrowing crates are supposed to protect piglets from being crushed but they don’t always do that. Piglets are pretty resilient and can be lain on for a short time and survive but the problem in crates is that once the sows are down they can’t be bothered to get back up again. It took them ages to go down because it was so uncomfortable, so even if they realise there’s a piglet under them they’re like, ‘no, I’m not getting up’. These crates are not a lifesaving cradle like some people have said they are, particularly when we’ve got huge litters with weak piglets.
How do the sows react, being locked into farrowing crates?
When they first go into a farrowing crate, it’s very, very stressful and scary for them. It’s a dead end, and then they’re suddenly shut in and then they can’t turn around or anything. Our first time mothers sometimes try to escape the crates, and they’ll bite and paw and try to back out. I’ve had gilts escape, tried to literally climb out of the crates, it’s hard watching them so upset. When an animal’s telling you ‘I do not want to be in here, I’m going to do my best to escape’ and then you’re like, ‘I’m going to have to tie you in’, that feels cruel. It bothers me every day. But you know, in order to do your job every day, you have to park it.
Over the course of their life they farrow multiple times, by the time they get to their sixth or seventh litter, they are still reluctant to be shut in the crates but they’re more just resigned to it. Over time they get emotionally broken, it’s sad.
When we let them out of the crates they’re just desperate to roll in mud, water, anything cool to wallow in. They remind me of dogs at the beach.
What are some of the behavioural challenges for a sow kept in a crate for several weeks?
They have a strong desire to nest build and they can get very frustrated trying to do that in a farrowing crate. We provide enrichment like a handful of fresh straw every day but it’s still not a lot. They are rooting at the bars and rooting at the concrete and all they want to do is make a nest, you know, for the safety of their piglets.
Nesting helps them to release all the hormones that are required for the farrowing process, and we’re essentially shutting that down by restraining them in a non-enriched environment. It can have a really negative consequence on the sow and the piglet’s relationship and sometimes the sow will bite and even kill her own piglets. Luckily we don’t get it very often, but all sorts of horrible things happen.
Do the crates cause physical pain and suffering?
We get a lot of shoulder sores because they’re lying on their sides longer and they often get so, so unbothered about moving posture that it’s essentially a pressure sore. If we don’t treat them quickly the piglets could start licking and eating them and then the wound gets really big.
We’ve seen pigs’ height and length increase significantly over the last 20 years, they’re bred to be bigger and bigger and the crates haven’t changed. So the pigs no longer fit into the crates as well as they used to, we have a few sows that are too big for the crates, so they’re essentially touching the bars all the time. For some of the longer sows there’s no room for their head, so when they lie down, their head is on top of their feed trough and drinker. That must be so uncomfortable for them stuck in that position for four weeks, it actually makes me wince. We had to develop extension bars to make the crate bigger.
Pushing the sows to have larger litters is also a problem for the sows and the piglets. We artificially inseminate using semen sent through the post. We changed our supplier and started getting a lot of enormous litters of 18, 19, 20 piglets, where there’s more piglets than then sow can feed. We had to put excess piglets down regularly. Between increasing the physical dimensions of the sows and increasing the number of piglets born, we’ve pushed them into being like an absolute machine, it can’t carry on indefinitely this way, being all about productivity at the expense of the animals’ welfare.
They also damage themselves on the crate trying to lie down or flip over, they can catch their teats with their own feet and rip them, and damage their vulvas on the back of the crate.
And the piglets’ space, for the weeks they’re in the crate, becomes very, very constricted very quickly. They try to play but the only space away from the sow is about the body length of a piglet, so there’s really no room to manoeuvre. And the piglets can get sore knees, elbows and feet from the floors too. The bigger the litter the more we see piglet sores that can lead to infection and lameness.
The law requires that farms provide enrichment materials that enable pigs to fulfil their essential behavioural needs. Is that possible in practice?
Our standard enrichment is they get about half a bucket of wood shavings and they get about half a leaf of straw every day, and the sows eat a lot of straw, so a lot of that will vanish. We try a range of enrichment, hessian sacks are good, but you’ve got to be on enrichment all the time not just put it in and forget about it. The blocks on chains can get snagged around the top of the crate so that they can’t get hold of them, or they can push the straw out of reach then that’s really frustrating. If they weren’t given any enrichment at all, then they will absolutely smash up their face during nesting, biting at the bars, biting at their food trough.
We speak to the girls every day, give them a scratch – they love a scratch and they get all squeaky and you know they love those little bits of interaction with us. It’s like the highlight of their day, but imagine 2 minutes, you know, in 24 hours where somebody’s showing you some appreciation. It’s not very great. Seeing them sitting there depressed day after day after day with their heads hung low, it just screams depression to me.
We quite often have pigs who essentially just go into a glazed vegetative state where their sole purpose is to just lie still and provide milk, and they barely eat. Sometimes they lose 100 kilos in three or four weeks and it’s horrible. And if the sow isn’t feeding then her milk can be affected, which can reduce the weaning weight of the piglets. We try everything to get them interested in eating again.
You’ve looked at free-farrowing pens, what are the advantages there?
In the farrowing pens you see them throwing the straw around making their nest and they’re really active and it’s clearly such a big box ticked for them. Seeing how they interact physically, being able to touch their piglets and move around and nurse them and then sometimes tell them off as well, it’s all so much better than what they experience in crates.
Temporary crating wouldn’t be so bad if it was only used to protects the piglets for up to five days, but often the sows just don’t get let out after that time, and sometime they get shut in before nesting. And there’s nobody inspecting that kind of thing.
What are the barriers to farmers wanting to move away from crates?
It will be the meat price, I would say. Unless we could get a quality assurance sticker, with a big enough mark up to pay for the cost. How are we supposed to invest in big welfare changes when we’re getting so many cheap meat imports from the continent and from elsewhere outside of the EU?
It feels like British consumers should be asking more questions and given more answers about their food, where it was raised and how it existed, the food miles. We also have the problem that people want cheap meats 24/7. It used to be a valued product and now it’s a pocket snack.
What are your hopes for the future of farrowing in British pig farming? And what should the Government do?
I really hope that we move on from this sort of barbaric cage. It’s a horrible system and there are so many better ways out there, with less suffering, less injuries, stress and illness. It doesn’t have to be this way, there are loads of different kinds of free farrowing systems but why aren’t retailers and consumers asking for them? It feels like they don’t know the reality of what’s going on behind farm gates. I think we do really need to change the script.
Yes, indoor free farrowing is more expensive, but we need to find the money to shift. We’ve got to have support from government – both the money and the right policies. I don’t think putting sows through weeks of crate confinement six, seven or eight times in their lives can be justified any more.
Humane Society International
High temperatures can be unpleasant or even dangerous for animals of all kinds.
With that in mind, here are a few ways you can help animals – from feathered to furry – when temperatures increase.
Our cat and dog companions can find it more difficult to regulate their body temperature when it gets hot, so you can help by ensuring they always have access to fresh drinking water and shade from the sun.
You can also add ice cubes to their drinking bowls or if you have a garden, you may want to set up a dog-friendly paddling pool. Consider giving them some frozen treats – many dogs love a frozen carrot or some icy apple, for example! Alternatively, you can whip up a batch of ice lollies for cats or dogs using their favourite freezable foods.
Cats and dogs cannot sweat like we do, instead most of the heat from their body is released through their ears, paw pads or tongue.
Keep them well-groomed to remove excess fur.
In hot weather, make sure to walk dogs early in the morning or late in the day when the sun isn’t as strong and stick to shady areas and grass. Carry water with you to keep your dog hydrated and let them have a paddle in the river or sea if it’s safe to do so.
Once the temperature reaches 20°C/68°F or above, be careful as dogs are at risk of getting heatstroke on walks, especially if they suffer from underlying conditions such as breathing difficulties. If temperatures hit the mid 20s/70s or above, then extreme caution should be taken.
You may need to walk your dog less frequently when hot weather hits. Missing an occasional walk won’t do any harm – but walking them in dangerously high temperatures could be fatal. If ever you’re unsure, it’s best to lean on the side of caution.
Even once it cools down in the evening, the pavement could still be too hot for your dog’s sensitive paws. Therefore, we recommend doing the pavement test to make sure the ground is suitable before going on a walk.
To do a pavement test, hold the back of your hand to the pavement for seven seconds. If you cannot keep your hand there for the full seven seconds because the surface is too hot, then it’s too hot for a dog’s paws. Keep them inside until it cools down.
Never leave animals alone in a parked car, not even for a minute! Even with the windows open, the inside of a car can become as hot as an oven very quickly. Animals can suffer irreversible organ damage or die in hot cars.
Even if it doesn’t seem like a particularly hot day to you, remember that our animal friends often have fur coats that they can’t take off, and they can overheat quickly.
If you’re planning on going to the shops or nipping out of your car for whatever reason, leave your animal friends at home.
If you see an animal in a car who appears to be overheating, call the police immediately.
Our smaller animal friends can overheat very quickly! Particularly if they are kept in wooden sheds or hutches, which will get hot very rapidly on sunny days.
If you would normally keep small animals outside, we recommend bringing them inside your home during hot spells to keep them safe from the heat.
Depending on their size and how much fur they have, any temperature above 20°C/68°F could be dangerous for them.
You can help to keep them cool by limiting their bedding – less hay, sawdust or newspaper – or try freezing their favourite treats. A small amount of frozen fruit or veggies is a great source of water as well as providing cooling enrichment for them.
You can also try putting a ceramic plate in the fridge or freezer for them to lay on and cool down. If you decide to do this, make sure to place it on the floor of their enclosure, not a shelf or high surface as this could be dangerous.
As with cats and dogs, during a heatwave, your small animal friends will be drinking more water. We recommend putting ice cubes in their water bottle or even trying a water bowl as well.
It is wise to give small animals more than one source of water and keep it regularly topped up, particularly during hot periods.
You can also try covering part of their enclosure with a damp towel or freezing a water bottle, wrapping it in a towel and placing it in their enclosure for them to lay next to when they’re feeling hot.
Rabbits release heat through their ears – therefore, gently dabbing their ears with a damp cloth or with your hand is an effective way of cooling them down quickly.
Symptoms of heatstroke will vary depending on the species of the animal, but some of the most common symptoms include:
If you think an animal in your care is experiencing heatstroke, you must act quickly.
Move them to a colder area in your home, apply ice packs or cold towels to their head, chest and neck, run slightly cool (not cold) water over them, let them drink small amounts of cool water and take them directly to a vet.
Acting fast could save their life so do not hesitate if you find yourself in this situation!
Wild animals will really appreciate a helping hand in a heatwave.
If you have a garden, driveway or any outside space available, try putting a water bowl down to aid thirsty animals like hedgehogs, foxes or birds, and be sure to add stones and pebbles to the bowl to help any exhausted animals who may need to climb out.
It’s important to keep the water refreshed and topped up regularly as well.
As animals come in all shapes and sizes, they won’t all be able to drink out of the same-sized dish.
We recommend placing different sized bowls in your outdoor space to accommodate as many animals as possible. Larger animals will prefer deeper dishes and smaller animals will need to drink from shallow dishes.
Varying the size and placement of the bowls will likely bring a larger volume of animals into your outdoor space – you may even see a wild animal that you’ve never laid eyes on before!
Humane Society International
Join us as we celebrate Malaysia’s huge step forward in animal welfare at a signing ceremony for Malaysia’s first cage-free aviary.
Friday, March 22, 2024
Bunga Room, Seri Pacific Kuala Lumpur
Schedule:
2.30pm-3.00pm: Registration and welcome coffee
3.00pm-3.05pm: Welcome message by Dr Saravanakumar S. Pillai, Senior Adviser, Farm Animal Welfare, Policy and Engagement, Humane Society International, Farm Animal Welfare and Protection
3.10pm-3.15pm: Opening address by Dr Sara Shields, Director, Farm Animal Welfare Science, Humane Society International, Farm Animal Welfare and Protection
3.20pm-3.25pm: JDE Peet’s Global Animal Welfare Policy by Dr Laurent Sagarra, Vice-President Sustainability, JDE Peet’s
3.30pm-3.35pm: OldTown White Coffee’s Cage-Free Egg Implementation Progress by Dawn Liew, General Manager, Food & Beverage, OldTown White Coffee
3.40pm-3.45pm: Beacon Mart Cage-Free Egg Commitment Announcement by Chew Hsien Loong, CEO Beacon Mart
3.50pm-3.55pm: Internet of Things (IoT) Enabled Cage Free Aviary Systems by Mr Han Hofstede, Head of Region Asia & India, Big Dutchman
4.00pm-4.05pm: The Journey to Better Hen Welfare by Tiew Siew Sien, Managing Director, Teong Choon TC Poultry Farm
4.10pm- 4.30pm: Panel discussion
4:35pm- 4.45pm: Arrival of Deputy Minister of National Unity, Senator Saraswathy Kandasami
5.05pm-5.15pm: Memorandum of Understanding Signings (witnessed by Deputy Minister)
5.20pm -5.30pm: Keynote speech by Deputy Minister Senator, Saraswathy Kandasami, and launching of the first cage-free aviary in Malaysia
5.30pm-5.35pm: Video presentation: Teong Choon Poultry Farm’s cage-free journey
5.40pm-5.45pm Certificate Presentation: Malaysia First Cage-Free Aviary System Egg Producer by Malaysia Book of Record
5.50pm- 6.00pm Press conference by Deputy Minister
5.50pm-6.00pm High tea for attendees
6:00pm: Event end
Humane Society International / United Kingdom
Vegan and vegetarian eateries across the UK come together to raise vital funds for animal protection through EatKind in restaurants, our campaign launching this World Vegan Month in November.
In the UK, over 1 billion animals a year suffer in factory farms. Their whole lives are confined in systems, such as cages, which prevent them from moving around or carrying out basic natural behaviours.
HSI works with governments, corporations, producers and institutions to enact reform, end factory farming and promote plant-based solutions.
All donations raised from EatKind in restaurants will go towards our work to stop the worst abuses to farmed animals and end animal cruelty in all its forms.
Getting involved is easy. Simply:
1. Select one vegan item off your menu.
2. On the selected item, donate 25p of each sale to us throughout November or a month of your choice.
3. Use our selection of fundraising materials to promote the campaign to your customers.
4. Send us any donations raised.
To learn more, email us on info@hsiuk.org.
Take a look at the participating restaurants—there might be one near you!
Humane Society International
Susan Atherton
Kathleen Linehan (Buffy)
Brian Borg
Marcelo de Andrade
Marilia Duffles
Nicolas Ibarguen
Jennifer Laue
Steven White
Kitty Block, Chief Executive Officer
Jeffrey Flocken, President
Erin Frackleton, Chief Operating Officer
William Hall, Chief Financial Officer
Angela Ciccolo, Chief Legal Officer
Alison Corcoran, Chief Development and Marketing Officer
Stephanie Briggs, Acting Chief People Officer
Nicole Paquette, Chief U.S. Programs and Policy Officer
Sara Amundsen, Chief U.S. Government Relations Officer
Anna Frostic, Senior Vice President, Programs and Policy
Reva Bhatia, Assistant Treasurer
Alexandra Friedberg, Secretary
Johanie Parra, Assistant Secretary
Arnedia Wallace, Assistant Secretary
Humane Society International / United Kingdom
Host a pet party and raise vital funds for animals who aren’t as lucky as our own!
Where: your home, yard, garden, local park or workplace
When: anytime! Pick a date and time that suits you
Whom to invite: everyone you know and their four-legged companions
Getting involved is easy! You could host a Paw Party and charge an entry fee per dog, ask for donations on the day or sell homemade dog treats (we’ll send you recipes).
Sign up and get your free Paw Party pack here. Your pack is full of everything you need to plan and host the best Paw Party!
You can also use our invitations, games, recipe card and quiz.
Raising £50 could help pay for a comfortable crate for one large dog during a rescue and transportation from a dog meat farm, along with food and bedding during quarantine before the dog is re-homed.
If you have any questions or would like to find out more, please get in touch with us on info@hsiuk.org or by calling 020 7490 5288.