woensdag 30 september 2009
Dierenbeschermingswet in China in de maak - Wet wordt eerste Chinese wet ter bescherming van dieren
China werkt aan eerste Dierenbeschermingswet
30-09-2009 Door Paul Kraaijer
ZWOLLE – In China wordt gewerkt aan de eerste Dierenbeschermingswet. Onlangs is hiertoe een concept opgesteld, die na een inspraakperiode voor burgers eind dit jaar zal worden voorgelegd aan het Volkscongres.
De conceptwet is opgesteld door een groep wetenschappers onder leiding van professor Chang Jiwen, verbonden aan de Chinese Academie van Sociale Wetenschappen, bijgestaan door enkele dierenrechtenorganisaties.
De internationale dierenrechtenorganisaties International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) en Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSCPA) zijn verheugd met deze eerste stap naar een betere bescherming van dieren in China. In de wet komen verschillende vormen van dierenmishandeling aan bod, zoals het wreed doden van (zwerf)honden, het levend villen van dieren als vossen en wasbeertjes voor hun bont, het onttrekken van gal uit beren (‘bile bears’), het uittrekken van tanden en klauwen bij tijgers die met toeristen op de foto mogen en het levend koken van katten om ze vervolgens te eten. Ook zullen vee (transport, slacht), wilde dieren in dierentuinen en proefdieren door de wet beschermd gaan worden. Vee wordt zelfs levend gevoerd aan grote katachtigen in dierentuinen en wildparken.
Opmerkelijk is dat in de conceptwet wordt voorgesteld een verbod in te stellen op het fokken met huisdieren. Verder zal het mogelijk worden om huisdieren te voorzien van data chips, zodat eigenaren van weggelopen en gevonden dieren kunnen worden getraceerd.
Recentelijk werden in de stad Hanzhong nog meer dan 40.000 honden gedood. De dieren werden in de straten van de stad letterlijk doodgeslagen met stokken. Beelden en foto’s van deze slachting van vooral zwerfhonden gingen de wereld over.
Uit een recente opiniepeiling onder 63.000 internetbezoekers (sina-dot-com) blijkt dat 89% van de Chinezen een Dierenbeschermingswet steunt. Een speciale wet zal volgens de bezoekers ook bijdragen aan een betere bewustwording onder Chinezen inzake dierenwelzijn.
Op dit moment worden alleen bedreigde diersoorten in China beschermd. Andere dieren kunnen nu nog ongestraft worden mishandeld en gedood.
Naast een betere bescherming van dieren zal een beter dierenwelzijn in China, aldus Chang Jiwen, ook kunnen leiden tot meer export van dieren. Dieren uit China en dierproducten worden zelden naar het Westen geëxporteerd.
Jiwen: “Dierenwelzijnsnormen zijn nu nog een grote belemmering voor export.” China ziet dan ook, naast een beter dierenwelzijn, vooral financiële en economische voordelen met het van kracht worden van de eerste Dierenbeschermingswet.
(Bron foto: http://www.antifursociety.org/)
Tweede giraffe dood in dierentuin Dhaka (Bangladesh) - 22 Dieren dit jaar in dierentuin overleden - Nog 3 giraffen over....
Another giraffe dies
30-09-2009 Staff Correspondent, The Daily Star, Bangladesh
A male giraffe at Dhaka Zoo died yesterday morning following the death of a female of the same species on September 8, revealing poor health management at the zoo. The number of animal deaths in a month now stands at four including a tiger, a lion and two giraffes, while 22 animals died so far in one year.
The government has formed a probe committee in this regard.
An official from the Dhaka Zoo suspects it could be "sabotage" as the giraffe was recovering from illness and looked quiet good yesterday morning even half an hour before its death.
"Two giraffes have been ill since September 21 but the dead one showed all signs of recovery this morning and then suddenly collapsed at 10:40am," says a zoo staff.
"It was chewing the cud in the morning what is a sign of good health of animals living on grass," he adds.
The dead animal was among five of the giraffes brought from South Africa in June last year. Now three giraffes are left and one of them is sick.
"Of the two sick giraffes, the one improving died yesterday. So I cannot say the fate of other one," says the zoo officer.
A male lion died within three days of the death of the young female giraffe earlier last month.
The curator and deputy curator of the zoo were sacked following the death of the giraffe and a probe committee was formed. But the report the probe committee submitted was never made public.
Earlier, a sambar deer died in the first week of May. In March, a baboon, a wildebeest and the last member of Malayan tapir died. One Royal Bengal Tiger, two freshwater crocodiles, one zebra and a lesser adjutant stork died in February.
The zoo is located on about 186 acres of land in Mirpur housing more than 2,000 animals of 157 species.
Of them, 57 species are mammals including elephant, Royal Bengal Tiger, lion, cheetah, rhinoceros, zebra, monkey, chimpanzee, and hippo. There are 61 species of birds, 11 species of reptiles including snakes and crocodiles and 28 species of fish.
Around 10,000 people visit this poorly managed zoo every day.
(Bron: http://www.thedailystar.net/)
(Bron foto: Daily Star)
Onenigheid in Baffin, Nunavut (Canada) over ijsbeer quota - Inuit willen meer ijsberen jagen dan toegestane quota - Inuit: er zijn genoeg ijsberen
Baffin hunters threaten revolt over Nunavut
government polar bear quotas
"Those are our bears and we can hunt the way we want"
30-09-2009 JANE GEORGE, Nunatsiaq News, Canada
The polar bear may now be a symbol for why the world must curb climate change in the Arctic. But polar bear management was a source of frustration and anger this week in Iqaluit when hunters, officials and members of the Nunavit Wilflife Management Boad met to consider a Government of Nunavut proposal to lower the polar bear quota for Baffin Bay.
“Inuit are very patient, but now that patience is wearing thin,” said Koalie Kooneeliusie of Qikiqtarjuaq’s Nattivak hunters and trappers association. Kooneeliusie spoke at a special public meeting of the Nunavut Wildlife Management Board held Sept. 29 and Sept. 30 in Iqaluit.
Consensus on a reduction to the polar bear quota in the Baffin Bay appeared unattainable as researchers and hunters disagreed.
Hunters threatened to completely ignore the quotas if they see any cut to their quota of 105, which is split between Pond Inlet, Qikiqtarjuaq and Clyde River.
“If the quota is cut, things will get hot,” said Jayko Allooloo from the Qikiqtani Wildlife Board.
“If it’s lower, we’ll hunt what we want,” Manasie Audlakiak of Clyde River’s Nangmautaq hunters and trappers association said, predicting a revolt among Inuit hunters if polar bear quotas are reduced.
The wildlife board called the meeting at the request of the GN, which obliged the board to move its regularily scheduled meeting from Kugluktuk to Iqaluit.
The board had to respond to a GN request made as a “ministerial management initiative” from Environment Minister Daniel Shewchuk, who called the Baffin Bay harvest of 105 polar bears “a continued conservation concern” in a June 30 letter.
Referring to science, which says the number of polar bears in the Baffin Bay population fell from 2,100 to 1,500 over the past 10 years, Shewchuk said the current quota was not “sustainable” and should be changed before the start of the hunt in October.
“It is critical for effective management that we get BB back on track,” Shewchuk told Henry Flaherty, chair of the wildlife board, which can recommend measures to establish, modify or remove total allowable harvests in Nunavut.
The GN suggested three options for reductions: cutting the current quota from 105 to 64, imposing a total moratorium on the hunt until numbers recovered to 2,000, or imposing another quota based on a new population estimate.
But hunters from Pond Inlet, Clyde River and Qikiqtarjuaq who came to the Iqaluit meeting said right from the start that the GN has it all wrong.
They say quota cuts are unnecessary because there are more polar bears, not fewer.
And they slammed southern media who have made polar bears a symbol of climate change, to be protected at all costs.
“Those who talk about Baffin Bay bears decreasing in numbers have never been there personally, they should come to the area and experience it for themselves… Why do we Inuit have to have our economic situation interfered with?” said Jaykolasie Kiliktee of Pond Inlet’s hunters and trappers association.
“Those are our bears and we can hunt the way we want,” said Lootie Thomasie of Qikiqtarjuaq’s hunters and trappers association.
And it isn’t fair for Inuit hunters in Baffin Bay to be penalized for climate change when they don’t produce any greenhouse gases, yet another speaker said.
Many also criticized research methods that rely on computer generated models to calculate polar bear numbers.
They deplored the small role given to Inuit traditional knowledge in polar bear research, which, they said, had worked well for them over many generations.
Some speakers suggested that biologists be sent “on holiday” while Inuit hunters take over their research.
In defence of science’s numbers, GN polar bear biologist Lily Peacock responded that scientific methods are “quite old” and involve “simple adding and subtracting” with variables to make the results “more truthful.”
But Peacock didn’t persuade her critics.
They complained that the research surveys are infrequent and poorly done, saying the 10-year old data used by researchers on the Baffin Bay population is out of date and inaccurate.
Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. pointed to the scientific estimates for bowhead whales, whose numbers eventually turned out to be much higher than scientists first thought — just as Inuit hunters have said for years.
And current polar bear management zones don’t reflect the reality of polar bear populations, said NTI wildlife advisor Glenn Williams, who said polar bear populations to the south and north of Baffin Bay are thriving.
If they were considered to be one large population group, its health wouldn’t be questioned, Williams said.
One by one, hunters talked about polar bears marauding meat caches, wrecking cabins, eating seals and walrus pups, and endangering people in the communities.
“People in Pond Inlet today have to work hard to protect themselves,” Killiktee told the board.
Elijah Panipakoocho of the Mittimattalik HTA asked why people now see fat bears, sometimes with three cubs, near Pond Inlet.
For hunters, these kinds of observations constitute evidence of higher polar bear numbers.
If there’s any problem with the numbers, it’s likely to be found in Greenland they said, which overhunted polar bears in Baffin Bay until quotas were established in 2006.
The process for calling the special board meeting also came under fire, because the Baffin Bay polar bear quota was supposed to have been settled at a public hearing to have been held in Pond Inlet in April 2008.
Many said the special meeting was reflected international political pressures on the territorial and federal governments.
These include a scheduled signing Oct. 17 for a memorandum of understanding with Greenland on polar hear management and pressing deadlines for international trade groups.
Environment Minister Jim Prentice reminded the board in a letter that the European Union has already banned polar bear products from Baffin Bay and more sanctions are possible.
Canada now has to produce what’s called a “non detrimental finding.”
This means it has to prove that there’s no environmental damage from continued trade in polar bears for the Convention on International trade in Endangered Species.
“It will be difficult to defend trade where available information indicates overharvest [in Baffin Bay] is a conservation concern,” Prentice said.
Next March, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service also plans to ask CITES to put polar bears on to a list, called Appendix 2, where no trade at all would be permitted, Prentice said.
This would “effectively close all trade in polar bear products from anywhere in Canada to any other country, and intensify international scrutiny of Canada’s management and consevation of polar bears,” Prentice warned.
Canada would be in a much stronger possible to opppose the proposal if it looks as if Canada is “managing issues of conservation concern such as oveharvest.”
So a decision not to reduce the Baffin Bay quota could influence Canada’s ability to argue against the proposal, Prentice said.
The outcome could also lay the foundation for future relationships with Greenland on co-management issues with Greenland, he argued.
But it was clear that hunters, and many of the board members, would be swayed in favour of a quota cut if hunters received financial compensation
The Nangmautaq HTA in Clyde River wants $25,000 per bear, 20 new hunting cabins, electric fences around existing cabins, more monitoring, and year-round polar bear hunting if their quota is cut.
If the hunters were angry and frustrated, so was Drikus Gissing, the GN’s head of wildlife.
“I don’t know how to bridge that misundertanding” about polar bear management, he said as the board entered its ninth hour of discussions.
The recommendation of the NWMB, which was to be made in camera following the end of the special meeting on Sept. 30, will go to Nunavut’s environment minister.
Among the possible options that could see the quota stay the same is a recommendation that the desired polar bear population of Baffin Bay is much smaller than 2,000.
This could be an interim measure until a new polar bear survey can be carried out and would allow for a quota of at least 105 animals for hunters in Pond Inlet, Clyde River and Qikiqtarjuaq.
Greenland’s current quota is 68, and to keep the target population at 1,500 polar bears in the Baffin Bay, the combined sustainable harvest should be only 90 animals and even then, the GN said, the population could drop.
(Bron: http://www.nunatsiaqonline.ca/)
(Bron foto: Nunatsiaq News)
Labrador in West Gloucester, Massachusetts (VS), mogelijk door twee jagers op herten doodgeslagen....
A dog is bashed; a family asks why
Gloucester police investigating death
30-09-2009 By David Cogger, Globe Correspondent, The Boston Globe, USA
GLOUCESTER - At the end of Bray Street in West Gloucester, a large granite stone is surrounded by pots of wilting yellow and purple mums on a mound of freshly turned sod, shaded by tall oaks and white pines.
“Otis Robert Wood 2003-2009’’ is hand-painted in white lettering across the stone, marking the grave of a beloved, 80-pound yellow Labrador that died Sept. 13 from blunt force trauma authorities say was likely caused by a boot.
Gloucester police and the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals have intensified their investigation into the death and are focusing their efforts on two hunters. The MSPCA also has offered a $1,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of anyone involved.
Otis’s family, meanwhile, is in mourning.
The Bray Street area, where Otis lived with Tim and Megara Wood and their 9-year-old daughter Tracy, is a sparsely populated neighborhood surrounded by 40 acres of undeveloped private property. Dogs have frequently roamed freely there.
And for several years, homeowners such as the Woods have allowed deer hunters to use their land and park in their driveways during the fall hunt ing season, which begins in mid-October.
And before the season - up until 10 days before opening - they have let hunters “bait’’ deer paths with piles of dried corn.
Just 24 hours after he failed to return from being with his “best friend’’ - a neighbor’s dog named Jackson - Otis was found next to one of the bait piles, having bled to death from his mouth and nose.
Tim Wood said he let his dog out midafternoon on Sept. 13, the same day he saw two hunters enter the woods to set up tree stands, and then he heard a commotion. “The dogs were barking, but only one came out of the woods,’’ he said.
It was not unusual for Otis to come home at his leisure.
“We got back about 6 or 6:30, and we started looking till about 11 that night,’’ Wood said.
The next morning, at 6 a.m., Wood, his neighbor, and Jackson searched the woods, plowing through thorny bushes until just after noon, when Jackson found his best friend in a grassy area near one of the corn piles.
The family vet described Otis’s injuries as similar to those of a dog hit by a car.
“The vet said somebody had kicked him,’’ Wood said.
One week later, the same truck returned with the same two hunters, Wood said, and one of the hunters made a quick trip into the woods and returned rather abruptly to his truck. “Fortunately, we recognized them and got a license plate number,’’ Wood said.
While there have been no arrests, it appears unlikely it was an accident, said Gloucester police Detective Steven Mizzoni. “We are investigating all of the possibilities,’’ he said.
Correction: Because of an error, the years on hand-painted sign marking the dog's grave should read "2003-2009". It was originally reported as "2003-2006".
(Bron: http://www.boston.com)
Medewerkers Borivali Natonal Park bij Mumbai (India) redden luipaard uit woonwijk - Meer en meer wilde dieren trekken naar bewoonde gebieden
Leopard rescued from residential area near
Mumbai
30-09-2009 Bombay News.Net, India
Mumbai, Sep. 30 : Rangers of Borivali National Park near Mumbai rescued a leopard that had entered a residential area of Kandivili on Wednesday.
The leopard reportedly entered the residential area during the early morning, and it reportedly mauled a local before being tranquillised and captured by the wildlife officials.
"It came into this area after crossing the wall...the wildlife officials came and captured the leopard after tranquillising it. Only one man sustained minor injuries when the leopard mauled him with its claws," said A Pawaskar, Inspector, Kandivili East Police Station.
In recent months, Maharashtra has witnessed a number of incidents of wild animals straying into urban areas, mainly owing to loss of habitat and extension of human settlements into forest areas.
According to wildlife sources, the leopard must have jumped over the wall since Borivali National Park is well protected.
India had about 7,300 leopards in the wild according to a 1997 census.
(Bron: http://www.bombaynews.net/)
Elephant Rampage in Indian Temple
Moving on to India where an elephant went on a rampage at the Tirupati Balaji temple on Monday. The incident took place during Dusshera festival ceremonies at the temple, when one of the elephants ran amok. Six people were injured when the elephant charged at the crowd of devotees. The elephant was aparently frightened by the loud sound of ringing bells and large crowds of people. Eventually, the elephant keeper and policemen brought the animal under control.
Hoe betrouwbaar en onafhankelijk is viroloog Ab Osterhaus?
Ab Osterhaus en zijn streken
Viroloog verdacht van belangenverstrengeling
30-09-2009 St. Anti Dierproeven Coalitie
Ab Osterhaus creëert angst om onderzoeksgelden los te krijgen. Dat hij dit ruiterlijk toegeeft is des te opmerkelijker. In het boek 'Slag om de chimpansees' over de campagne rondom het primatencentrum BPRC citeerde de schrijver Ab Osterhaus: "Als ik een pleidooi houd voor extra middelen voor de aanpak van influenza, aarzel ik niet de verschrikkingen van een wereldwijde uitbraak te schilderen. En het werkt, want het geld komt er. Angst is functioneel."
Dat Ab Osterhaus
goed zijn mondje kan roeren blijkt wel uit de grootte van de afdeling Virologie, waar zo'n 100 mensen werken. De onderzoeken worden o.a. gefinancieerd door de Europese Unie en de Nederlandse overheid. In 2006 ontving het onderzoeksteam van Ab Osterhaus miljoenen uit Brussel om producten te ontwikkelen tegen de vogelgriep.Recentelijk kwam Ab Osterhaus in opspraak vanwege vermeende belangenverstrengeling rondom de ontwikkeling van middelen tegen de Mexicaanse griep. Ab Osterhaus, influenzadeskundige en regeringsadviseur over de Mexicaanse griep, heeft aandelen in een bedrijf dat bezig is met de ontwikkeling van vaccins tegen H1N1, zoals het griepvirus officieel heet. Dat blijkt uit onderzoek van het radio 1-programma Argos, waar Quote over bericht. Osterhaus blijkt een belang van 9,8 of 9,9 procent te hebben in het bedrijf ViroClinics, een Rotterdams bedrijf dat in 2000 is opgericht door het aan de universiteit verbonden Erasmus Medisch Centrum (EMC).
Osterhaus waarschuwt al maanden dat de Mexicaanse griep verregaande en dodelijke gevolgen kan hebben. Nederland heeft om die reden veel meer vaccins ingeslagen dan bijvoorbeeld België, waar specialisten minder paniekerig hebben gereageerd op de Mexicaanse griep.Hoewel de griep mild blijkt te zijn, blijft de viroloog volhouden dat het een venijnig virus betreft. Andere deskundigen bestrijden dat. Ook wordt de werking van het vaccin bestreden en zou het ernstige bijwerkingen veroorzaken. Het kabinet besloot eerder 34 miljoen vaccins in te slaan om iedere Nederlander tweemaal in te kunnen enten tegen deze griep. De kosten zouden 300 miljoen euro bedragen. Een enorm bedrag voor een land dat juist besluit om de broekriem aan te halen.
In februari plaatste de Anti Dierproeven Coalitie nog een uitgebreid stuk over Ab Osterhaus en de dierproeven die plaatsvinden in het virologie laboratorium. De afdeling Virologie gebruiken o.a. fretten, katten en apen in dierexperimenten.
(Bron: http://www.stopdierproeven.org/)
(Bron foto: St. Anti Dierproeven Coalitie)
Universiteit Maastricht kan donderdag weer dierenactivisten ADC verwachten - Protest tegen gebruik honden als proefdieren in universiteit
Dierenactivisten demonstreren opnieuw in
Maastricht
30-09-2009 Agrarisch Dagblad
Actievoerders van de Anti Dierproeven Coalitie gaan donderdag voor de tweede keer in korte tijd demonstreren bij de Universiteit Maastricht. Ze willen dat de universiteit stopt met het gebruik van proefdieren voor onderzoek naar hart- en vaatziekten, zei een woordvoerder van de coalitie woensdag.
De demonstratie vindt plaats tijdens een internationaal symposium van cardiologen. Volgens de actievoerders zijn de experimenten met honden niet alleen wreed, maar ook onnodig, omdat bij cardiologen twijfels bestaan over het nut ervan.
In juli demonstreerde het gezelschap ook al bij de universiteit. Burgemeester Gerd Leers probeerde die demonstratie toen te verbieden, maar kwam daarvan terug. Voor donderdag stelde Leers beperkende voorwaarden: zo mogen de activisten het symposium niet verstoren en geen spreekkoren aanheffen.
De actievoerders kondigen nu al aan op 23 oktober opnieuw te gaan demonstreren bij de onderwijsinstelling.
(Bron: http://www.agd.nl/)
Grote hoeveelheid slagtanden olifanten in Douala (Kameroen) in beslag genomen - Illegale ivoorhandel moet worden aangepakt
Ivory Dealers Arrested in Douala : About 150
Elephants Feared Killed for the Deal
30-09-2009 By Vincent Gudmia Mfonfu, The Last Great Ape Org.
LAGA - Cameroon
The Littoral Regional Delegation for National Security has arrested 3 wildlife dealers in Douala for trafficking in a huge consignment of ivory totally about 1000 kilogrammes. The consignment of ivory is reported to have been heading for export to the international black market when the dealers were arrested.
An investigation has been opened by the Douala Judicial Police and the National Control Brigade of the Ministry of Forestry and Wildlife. The Last Great Ape Organisation (LAGA) is assisting in the establishment of a case file against the traffickers who have been arrested and are now behind bars.
If found guilty and by virtue of the Cameroon 1994 wildlife law the traffickers risk facing up to 3 years imprisonment and or paying a fine of up to 10 million CFA.
"The illegal ivory trade is a well organized crime of international dimention. we detect a mere fraction of this form of trafficking connected to other forms of organized crime as the drugs trade and the arms trade.
The seizure represents the estimate of more than 150 killed elephants. from past experience we can assume the killing may have been done in several different African countries as criminal cartels control coordinate poaching activities across Africa. Fighting corruption is the key to arresting and prosecuting the heads of the criminal ivory trafficking cartels”, states Ofir Drori, Director of LAGA.
Extinction
If the illegal ivory trade is not brought control soon, most of Africa may lose the majority of its elephant population in the next decade. “By our estimates, more than 38 000 African elephants were killed for ivory in 2006 alone”, notes Samuel Wasser and colleagues: “The illegal slaughter of African elephants for ivory is now worse than it was at its peak in 1980s”.
Illegal wildlife trade in many species and their products is seen to be growing by leaps and bounds throughout the world, implying that wildlife law enforcement operations need to be stepped up. “We have all the control mechanisms put in place to control wildlife exploitation” states Elvis Ngolle Ngolle, Cameroon’s Minister of Forestry and Wildlife.
The protection of endangered species including elephants has attracted increasing interest and concern by the international community since the mid 70s, following early warnings of their extinction. Despite that concern, a former senior official of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) in Cameroon, Martin Tchamba observers, “Elephants are declining in large numbers everyday due to the booming illicit trade in ivory… If governments in the region do not take urgent measures to combat the illicit trade… they could be extinct within the next 10 years”.
Experienced ivory traffickers tend to know about the loopholes in government ivory trade control systems and have worked out evasion measures. There is therefore the urgent need for wildlife law enforcement officials to be given adequate training to improve their ivory identification skills, their understanding of legal procedures and ivory smuggling detection methods including geographic DNA testing and analysis a new tool developed by Samuel Wasser and his team of scientists which is now helping to stop the cartels behind ivory smuggling.
(Bron: http://www.laga-enforcement.org/)
(Bron foto: LAGA)
Vrouw in Vail, Colorado (VS), verjaagt beer en jong met kussen uit woning - Beide dieren vrijdag weer in woning en gevangen en gedood
Vail woman scares away bear in her home with
pillow
30-09-2009 The Los Angeles Times, USA
Here's a pillow fight Sally Rebehn is glad she won.
Confronted by a bear in the bedroom of her west Vail home a few weeks ago, Rebehn screamed and decided to fling a pillow at the animal, which was standing on its hind legs 12 feet from her. The pillow attack worked.
Sally Rebehn/Special to the Vail Daily
Rebehn said the bear fled to another room of the home, where Rebehn lives with her son's family. Police eventually chased away the bear, along with her three cubs, including one that also got into the home.
"I was so scared. I bet the people across the creek thought I was getting murdered," Rebehn said. She said she first thought it was her dog that had followed her into her bedroom.
"No way I thought there would be a bear in the bedroom," she told the Vail Daily newspaper Tuesday.
The bear and her cubs later returned to the family's property several times — and tried unsuccessfully to enter the home again.
Sally Rebehn/Special to the Vail Daily
On Friday, Colorado Division of Wildlife officers captured the animals. The mother bear and the cub that went into the home were euthanized, while the other two cubs were relocated because they seemed to be afraid of humans, said Randy Hampton, a DOW spokesman.
"Once bears learn they can get food in homes, there's not a lot you can do to keep them from getting into homes," Hampton said.
(Bron: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/)
(Bron foto's: http://www.vaildaily.com/)
Kenyaanse politie onderschept 684 kilo slagtanden olifanten op luchthaven Nairobi - Lading bestemt voor Bangkok - Politie zoekt handelaren
30-09-2009 Agence France Presse
NAIROBI — Kenya police are looking for the people behind a shipment of 684 kilogrammes of ivory seized at Nairobi's main airport and destined to Bangkok, a police official said Wednesday.
The elephant tusks were discovered at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport on Tuesday during a nighttime cargo inspection.
"The consignment was intercepted as it was about to be transported out of the country. No person has been arrested," said the official on condition of anonymity.
"We are now looking for the owners or people who were transporting it," he added. "We know it was headed for Bangkok, but we want to know the exact destination and the people who were going to receive it."
Kenya Wildlife Service spokeswoman Kentice Tikolo confirmed the seizure.
In July, authorities intercepted 16 elephant tusks and two rhino horns being illegally exported to Laos from Mozambique.
Kenya outlawed poaching and the reckless slaughter of wildlife in 1977, but allowed controlled culling and harvesting of game meat. In 2003 conservationists managed to have the activity banned completely.
But poaching for elephant and rhino tusks has been on the rise in Africa since the partial lifting in 2007 of an international trade ban to allow a one-off ivory sale to China and Japan by Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe.
(Bron & foto: http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5imAKMFUpWrUUmDezqsGsYGIEFo4w)
19-Jarige jongen in Philadelphia (VS) gearresteerd verdacht van intapen kat - Knaap bekent de dierenmishandeling
Teen who wrapped cat in duct tape arrested
30-09-2009 Metro, UK
Investigators say a Philadelphia teenager wrapped a cat in duct tape, put it in a shopping bag and left it in a neighbor's backyard.
The Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals says 19-year-old James Davis was arrested Saturday on animal cruelty charges.
Official George Bengal says Davis admitted to taping up the cat from neck to tail after he spotted it in his yard Sept. 21.
The gray tabby was nicknamed Sticky by animal welfare workers. It was dehydrated and had to be sedated while the tape was cut off its fur. Animal welfare workers are still looking for Sticky's owner. The cat is doing well.
Davis faces up to two years in prison and a minimum $1,000 fine if convicted.
(Bron: http://www.metro.co.uk/)
(Bron foto: Metro)
Pools universitair onderzoek wijst uit: beren in gevangenschap leven onder erbarmelijke omstandigheden - In totaal 52 beren in gevangenschap
Poland's bears bathe in tubs?
30-09-2009 Polskie Radio, Poland
A University of Wroclaw-RSPCA-OTOZ Animals report shows that Poland's captive bears are kept in terrible conditions with too-small cages, concrete walls, poor diets and a lack of water.
The bears living in zoos in Braniewo on the Baltic coast, in Bialystok, eastern Poland, in Leszno, western Poland and in a refuge in Korabiewice, central Poland, live in the worst conditions. Bears in zoological gardens in Bydgoszcz, northwest, Czluchow, northern Poland and in Wroclaw, southeastern Poland, enjoy the best conditions.
Researchers and authors of the report claim that bears are sensitive, intelligent creatures that need not only assurances of good physical conditions, but also psychological comfort. A concrete cage smaller than 150 square metres, as are many of the cages at zoos around Poland, can only contribute to violent outbursts from the captive bears.
“It is essential to mimic natural terrain in the bears' cages with hiding places and pools of water,” claims Agnieszka Sergiel from the University of Wroclaw, adding that “they need [the water] to cool the body and help in the molting process.” The zoo in Korabiewice provided the resident bear with a bathtub for these purposes. However, the bear could not fit into the tub.
In total, there are 52 bears in captivity in Poland. Nineteen of these animals live in conditions considered by the RSPCA (Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals) to be inhumane. Authors of the report have provided zoos throughout the country with suggestions on how to improve the conditions of the bears. European Union norms stipulate that animals held in captivity have their basic biological needs met.
(Bron: http://polskieradio.pl/)
Komst nertsenfokker in Carleton, Yarmouth County (Nova Scotia, Canada) leidt tot onrust in kleine gemeente - Bewoners vrezen milieuvervuiling
Worries voiced on mink farm
30-09-2009 The Chronicle Herald, Canada
YARMOUTH (CP) — A proposed mink farm in western Nova Scotia is dividing a small community.
Rick and Nadine LeBlanc have applied for a permit to build a mink farm on Sloan’s Lake in Carleton, Yarmouth County, and say they found a threatening note in their mailbox.
A public meeting was held Monday night and some residents expressed fears over the possible environmental effects of a mink farm.
Barry MacGregor, executive director of the Yarmouth YMCA, say they had to close their summer camp this year because of algae in the water that some believe was caused by runoff from existing mink farms in Digby County.
An RCMP officer attended the meeting, saying the issue is emotional and he was there just in case things got out of hand.
(Bron: http://thechronicleherald.ca/)
Vanaf komend jaar staat provincie Gelderland meer wilde zwijnen toe - Aantal dieren mag oplopen van 860 tot 1580
Gelderland staat meer wilde zwijnen toe
30-09-2009 De Gelderlander
ARNHEM - Vanaf 2010 mogen meer wilde zwijnen op de Veluwe rondlopen. Het provinciebestuur van Gelderland wil niet langer vasthouden aan het aantal van 860 zwijnen in het voorjaar. Het wil gaan werken met wisselende standen, die kunnen oplopen tot 1.580.
Gedeputeerde Staten namen dinsdag besluiten over de jacht op een groot aantal dieren in de komende vijf jaar. Het besluit over de wilde zwijnen springt het meest in het oog. Op de delen van de Veluwe waar veel mensen wonen – met name ten noorden van Apeldoorn – blijft de jacht even intensief als voorheen.
In delen waar veel minder mensen wonen, ten noorden van Arnhem bijvoorbeeld, mogen meer zwijnen in leven blijven. Als een gebied helemaal is omrasterd, kan jacht ook helemaal achterwege blijven.
(Bron: http://www.gelderlander.nl/)
(Bron foto: Gelderlander)
Bont voor Dieren en Humane Society International: Fotoexpositie 'A Sealed Fate?' 7 oktober in Bethanienklooster, Amsterdam
Join me in Amsterdam to celebrate seals!
30-09-2009 The Humane Society International
Humane Society International and Bont voor Dieren are bringing "A Sealed Fate?" to Amsterdam on 7th October. "A Sealed Fate?" launched in New York City in July 2008 and has since travelled across the United States and Canada, including a one-month exhibition at the United Nations. An enthralling exhibition of beautiful images of seal pups, taken by renowned international fashion photographer Nigel Barker.
Barker's photographs and documentary video provide an intimate look at the short lives of baby harp seals victimised by Canada's annual commercial seal kill.
The pristine landscape and charming seal pups in Nigel's images remind us all about the importance of ending the annual seal slaughter for good. The ProtectSeals team will be there to talk about our ongoing campaign and how you can help us protect seals.
When: Wednesday, 7th October 2009 from 10am to 5pm
Where: Bethanienklooster, Barndesteeg 6B, Amsterdam
The event is free and open to the public.
(Bron: http://action.humanesociety.org/)
(Bron foto top: http://www.thedailygreen.com/living-green/blogs/recycling-design-technology/nigel-barker-a-sealed-fate-seal-clubbing-460409 / Bron foto: seal with baby: http://thediscerningbrute.com/2009/04/page/2/)
Handelaar in apen voor vivisectie industrie, Worldwide Primates in Miami, Florida (VS), blijft doelwit voor dierenactivisten
Monkey Breeder Targeted by Animal Rights
Extremists
29-09-2009 By Deirdra Funcheon, Broward Palm Beach New Times, USA
It's been almost 20 years since the notorious "Bangkok Six" incident, when investigators at a Thailand airport intercepted a crate marked "live birds," only to find that it contained six tightly-packed endangered orangutans destined for Russia from Indonesia. Only two of the orangutans survived.
A Miami primate dealer named Matthew Block -- proprietor of World Wide Primates, who'd started his business of raising animals for research while still in high school -- eventually pled guilty to charges for his role in the case, paid a $30,000 fine, and was sentenced to 13 months in prison. He then began cooperating with authorities, working as an informant to rope in illegal animal traders. In 1993, he helped arrange the arrest of five Mexican zoo officials who traveled to Miami in hopes of buying a gorilla on the black market. (During that incident, a Fish & Wildlife investigator dressed in an ape suit to fool the zoo guys into a takedown.) Around the same time, he also helped ensnare a Jacksonville dealer who was holding rare Australian cockatoos.
In spite of Block's work on the side of law enforcement, some animal rights activists have never forgiven him or forgotten him, instead engaging in their own form of retaliation. In 1994, 33 crab-eating macaques were stolen from Block's property. Last year, intruders cut holes in several monkey cages, letting the animals escape. And this week, the Animal Liberation Front received a communique that activists targeted a Miami Beach house they believed to belong to Block's wife Brooke. "We punctured 4 tires on a car in the driveway and poured red paint over the car and on the front door of the house," authors of the communique stated. (Matthew Block, now in his late 40s, is no longer a registered agent for Worldwide Primates; rather, his wife Brooke and mother Gertie are listed officers on the paperwork.)
Matthew Block spoke to New Times briefly, confirming the incident -- and clarifying that the vandals missed their target. The house and car, he says, "belong to my 80-year-old mother. This is their third time getting it wrong, and one of those was a firebombing a few years ago. They're going to end up killing or hurting someone."
When Block spoke to us last September after intruders released the monkeys, he noted that "These monkeys never lived a day in their lives" out of his company's care. "They have no clue how to behave in the wild. No clue how to get food and water." Block said it was cruel to free them -- to them let them "sit in the wild and starve to death." Other primate experts said that the animals can be unpredictable and aggressive, and it was fortunate that the released monkeys did not run into and hurt or maim humans.
Records received from the United States Department of Agriculture in response to a Freedom of Information Act request indicate that World Wide Primates has had its license renewed regularly with few violations. In the years since 2002, inspectors noted a missing tile, a rusted cage, and a note that "In July 2005, non-human primates succumbed to heat exhaustion when HVAC system in Room C failed." In 2004, investigators noted that an adult male capuchin was housed alone; the law required he be able to see and hear nonhuman primates of his own species.
Perhaps the most revealing detail to be gleaned from the sparse paperwork is that business has been good: In 2003, a year the company bought 319 animals and sold 182, the reported gross income from sales totaled $340,295. In 2007, when the company bought 1123 animals and sold 1270, that figure peaked at more than $5 million.
Block noted that his company imports animals for research purposes but does not conduct any research. Although his line of work remains a topic for ethical debate, Block in turn argued that "these people [the vandals] do not deserve publicity." Last year he stated, "ethically, the media should not be giving accolades to people who violate federal law." He added that in the search for the perpetrators, "the FBI is very much involved." The agency considers animal rights extremism "domestic terror" and in 2006, revisions to the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act toughened penalties for related crimes.
(Bron: http://blogs.browardpalmbeach.com/)
(Bron foto: Broward Palm Beach)
Footnote Kraaijer:
Please, read here my story on the export of 68 small monkeys (60 squirrel monkeys and 8 capuchin monkeys) from Paramaribo, Suriname, to Worldwide Primates in October 2008. It lead to protests of Dutch animalrights activists at the Suriname consulate in Amsterdam.
dinsdag 29 september 2009
Op Sri Lanka 105 olifanten overleden in eerste 7 maanden dit jaar (224 in zelfde periode 2008) - Uiteenlopende doodsoorzaken
105 elephant deaths this year
29-09-2009 Colombo Today, Sri Lanka
Sep 29, 2009 5:05 PM · As many as 105 elephants had died in the country due to various reasons in the first seven months of this year, records of the Wildlife Conservation Department show.
In the previous year,
the figure stood at 224.During the same period, 21 people had been killed in elephant attacks, the department said.
The highest number of elephant deaths had been reported from northwestern wildlife range, and 60 of the deaths were due to gunshot wounds.
(Bron: http://colombotoday.com/)
(Bron foto: Colombo Today)
Animal neglect on a large scale, on a property owned by New Zealand's biggest dairy producer...
This is a horrible story about animal neglect on a large scale, on a property owned by New Zealand's biggest dairy producer.
Close Up has got video of calves literally starving to death; animals taken from their mothers but not fed.
When MAF eventually turned up they had to put down more than 100 calves.
It is understood that MAF gave advance warning to Crafar Farms that it would be visiting the 1,800 cow farm, prompting an impromptu slaughtering of those calves closest to death by workers "who bludgeoned them to death with hammers or slit their throats"
After interest.co.nz obtained the video, producer Bryan Spondre and Editor Bernard Hickey visited the farm where the calves had been kept to find out more.
When they drove up to the calf shed they were confronted by farm manager Sam Webb. He told them to: "Get the f*** off this property. You have no right to be here."
Bryan started taking photographs of the shed and Sam Webb manhandled him back into our car before swearing abuse and grabbing at Bryan's camera.
"I'll take both of you bastards out," he yelled.
Crafar asked interest.co.nz not to broadcast the video because it would damage the country's image.
More info: Source:
http://msn.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/art...
http://tvnz.co.nz/close-up/appalling-...
Through exposure the truths about neglect and abuse from animals, we hope to bring awareness to all animals lover in New Zealand.
DON'T say YOU LOVE ANIMALS until you can face the truth about animal cruelty and are willing to be a voice for them. Please understand...We are their only hope!!!
They cannot control their destiny, nor speak of the pain they suffer...But WE as a civilized society can... and SHOULD...and help to put an end to Animal Cruelty!
There is little that separates humans from other sentient beings—we all feel pain, we all feel joy, we all deeply crave to be alive and live freely, and we all share this planet together. Gandhi
My only purpose here is to educate and bring awareness to the harsh reality of animal cruelty that is rampant across the nation.
Autoriteiten Douala (Kameroen) vinden 1250 kilo slagtanden - Drie wildhandelaren opgepakt - Aantal slagtanden duidt op ruim 100 gedode olifanten
Three wildlife dealers arrested in Douala
29-09-2009 Channel: Cameroon Radio and Television, Cameroon (28-09-2009)
Programme: National News
Date: 28 September 2009
“The Regional Delegation of National Security has arrested three wildlife dealers in Douala for trafficking in huge consignment of Elephant tusks totally 1250 kilograms. The consignment of elephant tusks is reported to have been heading to export to the internal market when the dealers were arrested. This single seizure represents the killing of more than 100 elephants and the ministry of Forestry and Wildlife is expected to lay claims for charges”.
(Bron: received today through email from The Last Great Ape Organization, Cameroon: http://www.laga-enforcement.org/)
Olifanten in Safaripark Oregon (VS) trekken publiek uit hele wereld voor het wassen van auto's....
Car-washing elephants attract visitors to Oregon's
Wildlife Safari
29-09-2009 By Katie Boer KPIC News, KVAL, USA
WINSTON, Ore. -- It's a car wash like you've never seen before. But it still has all the standard features.
High pressure rinse? Check.
Streak free detail? You got it!
Alice is one of three African elephants at Wildlife Safari that enjoys washing cars. It's one of several new exhibits and attractions that the Wildlife Safari added over the past summer. Despite the economy, the park has seen their sales increase by 28 percent over this time last year.
"I think a great deal of the success that happened at Wildlife Safari this year was attributed to these animals," Executive Director Dan VanSlyke said. "People love to come out and have fun. What's really cool with our elephants is what started this whole thing, and that's that they love to play in water."
Visitors are traveling to the Wildlife Safari in Winston from all over the globe. Tourists from as far as India and London are coming to Oregon to get their cars washed by elephants in an exhibit added over the summer. The wild animal park believes that the difference could be a direct result to Alice and the elephants' car washing procedure.
"They've definitely drawn a lot of people into park," elephant supervisor Carol Matthews said. "In fact that we've had lots of people come back and do it again and again cause they had to bring their friends and families"
While it's hose-free, it's guaranteed not to get your car clean.
But VanSlyke believes that won't be a problem.
"The reason that there's been such a spike this summer during this bad economic time, is people still want to recreate. Still kind of want to get away from problems," Van Slyke said. "But they want it affordable and they want to feel that they're actually investing in something that has a value."
One recommendation: don't bring a convertible.
(Bron: http://www.kval.com/)
Anti Dierproeven Coalitie demonstreert donderdag bij cardiologen symposium in Maastricht tegen experimenten op honden
ADC roept cardiologen op om harteloze dierproeven
links te laten liggen
29-09-2009 St. Anti Dierproeven Coalitie
Donderdag 1 oktober demonstreert de Anti Dierproeven Coalitie vreedzaam tegen hondenexperimenten in Maastricht. Paul Volders, als onderzoeker verbonden aan het Academisch Ziekenhuis Maastricht en de Universiteit Maastricht heeft een symposium georganiseerd voor cardiologen uit binnen- en buitenland: onder hen bevinden zich dierproefnemers van de Universiteit Maastricht en van Janssen Pharmaceutica in het Belgische Beerse.
Van 13.45 tot 16.00 uur demonstreren we bij de Karl Dittrich zaal, Bonnefantenstraat 2 in Maastricht
Het gehele programma kunt u hier vinden.
Honden zijn in de Limburgse hoofdstad al ruim 20 jaar het lijdende voorwerp in nieuwsgierigheidsonderzoek op het gebied van hart- en vaatziekten. De Universiteit Maastricht heeft tussen 2000 en 2007 532 van deze geliefde viervoeters gebruikt in dierexperimenten. Experimenten die het daglicht niet kunnen verdragen.
Zo werden bij 11 honden de halsslagaders chirurgisch blootgelegd en vervolgens 5 minuten lang geblokkeerd waardoor de bloedtoevoer naar de kop werd afgesloten. Dit is te vergelijken met de effecten van verstikking met dit verschil dat de honden bleven ademen. Hierna werden verschillende stoffen bij de hondjes geïnjecteerd om de effecten hiervan op het hart- en vaatstelsel te bestuderen.
Dat deze dierproeven ook wetenschappelijk gezien veel vraagtekens oproepen, blijkt uit de conclusies van de dierproefnemers zelf in hun eigen publicaties; in het discussie gedeelte stellen de onderzoekers dat voorzichtigheid geboden is bij het interpreteren van de bevindingen vanwege de gebreken van het gebruikte diermodel.
Buitenlandse collega's, zoals de Amerikaanse cardioloog John Pippin, zijn nog veel stelliger in hun oordeel; proeven op honden zijn misleidend en leiden niet tot klinisch relevante resultaten ten behoeve van mensen. Zijn kritiek op het gebruik van honden in biomedisch onderzoek naar hart-en vaatziekten kunt u hier inzien: http://www.animalaid.org.uk/images/pdf/curiosity.pdf.
De Anti Dierproeven Coalitie is tegen dierproeven op ethische en wetenschappelijke gronden en voert momenteel campagne voor een verbod op honden-en kattenexperimenten. Regelmatig voeren we actie bij bedrijven en instellingen die dierproeven uitvoeren om aandacht te vragen voor het lot van deze vergeten dieren.
(Bron: http://www.stopdierproeven.org/)
(Bron foto: St. Anti Dierproeven Coalitie)
Knutschi wandelt over de A7 in Duitse Hessen - Politie vangt beroemde eland en laat dier vrij in bosgebied
Polizei nimmt Knutschi den Elch fest
29-09-2009 Spiegel, Germany
Ein ausgedehnter Spaziergang endete für den Elch "Knutschi" in Hessen mit einem Schuss aus einem Betäubungsgewehr. Weil sich das Tier zu nah an die A7 wagte, ließ die Polizei die Autobahn sperren und "Knutschi" niederstrecken - zu seinem eigenen Schutz.
Kassel - Keine Mühe hat die hessische Polizei gescheut, um den Elch "Knutschi" zu beschützen. Mehrere Wochen war er durch die Wälder in Nordhessen gewandert, tauchte mal hier auf, mal dort. Einmal gelang es der Polizei, ein paar Fotos von ihm zu schießen. Auch ein Tierarzt konnte "Knutschi" untersuchen, allerdings zunächst nur aus 30 Meter Entfernung. "Anschließen lief das Tier wieder davon", wie die Polizei mitteilte.
Als "Knutschi"
jetzt der A7 bei Kassel gefährlich nah kam, parallel zur Fahrbahn trabte und besorgte Autofahrer den Notruf wählten, entschied sich die Polizei zu drastischeren Maßnahmen: Sie sperrte die Autobahn und verständigte abermals einen Veterinär. Der schoss den Elch mit einem Betäubungsgewehr nieder.Jetzt wurde "Knutschi" zum eigenen Schutz in ein benachbartes Waldgebiet in Hessen gebracht und ausgesetzt.
Das Tier ist auf Wanderschaft und war in der Vergangenheit schon in ostdeutschen Bundesländern gesichtet worden. In Sachsen wurde versucht, die Tiere wieder anzusiedeln.
(Bron: http://www.spiegel.de/)
(Bron foto: Spiegel)
PETA VS undercover video: Koeien in boerderij te Shamokin, Pennsylvania (VS), ernstig mishandeld - Boerderij levert melk aan botergigant Land O'Lakes
PETA Undercover Videos Show Cows Kicked,
Jabbed With a Knife, and Left to Die
29-09-2009 PETA, USA
Harrisburg, Pa. -- A PETA undercover investigation of a Shamokin, Pa., supplier to Land O'Lakes--the largest seller of branded butter in the U.S.--has revealed abuse and neglect of animals, and the farm's owners have been charged with violating Pennsylvania's anti-cruelty statute. PETA believes that the conditions uncovered during the investigation also violate health and sanitation laws.
Among PETA's findings are the following:
* Cows were kicked, electro-shocked, and jabbed with a blade when the animals had trouble standing and walking.
* Cow #36's gangrenous, infected teat ruptured while she was being milked by a machine. Workers were told to tightly wrap the teat with an elastic band in order to "amputate" it. The cow's condition deteriorated over the next 11 days before she finally died.
* Cow #826 was allowed to become severely debilitated over a period of nearly a month before she was finally shot dead.
* Cows and calves were kept in pens and barns whose floors were filled with deep excrement, which caused foot and hoof problems and fostered disease. Calves rescued from the facility had pneumonia, "manure scald," ringworm, pinkeye, and parasites.
"From birth to slaughter, these cows are treated like nothing more than machines," says PETA Vice President Daphna Nachminovitch. "The cruelty and filth that PETA found should make people think twice about buying any dairy products."
Renowned livestock-welfare expert Temple Grandin called the conditions depicted on PETA's video "absolutely atrocious."
PETA has filed complaints with the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture regarding the facility's unsanitary cow-housing and milking practices and its improper disposal of dead animals. PETA has called on Land O'Lakes to buy milk only from operations that meet PETA's 12-point animal welfare plan, which would prevent much of the suffering documented at the Shamokin factory farm.
(Bron: http://www.peta.org/)
Man dies as bus hits buffaloes along Nakuru-Nairobi highway Kenya - Dead buffaloes dragged away behind cars.....
One person has died and ten others seriously injured when a bus they were traveling in hit two buffaloes along the Nakuru-Nairobi highway. The stray buffaloes from Soysambu wildlife conservancy in Gilgil area had wandered off in search of pastures and water at the Mbaruk area where they have wrecked havoc causing human wildlife conflict. The injured are admitted at Rift Valley Provincial General Hospital in Nakuru. (http://www.ntv.co.ke)
Kenyan drought effects: Farmers trade cows for goats and sheep
Farmers in Mwingi are trading their cattle for goats and sheep after as drought continues to bite in the region. The livestock farmers who have incurred huge losses in the last three years to drought that shows no sign of letting up prefer goats and sheep for their enduring habits and are calling on the government to buy their sheep and goats since they lack a market in Mwingi. (http://www.ntv.co.ke)
Inwoner Putten steekt hond met een mes - Dier raakt ernstig gewond
Puttenaar steekt hond met mes
29-09-2009 Omroep Gelderland
PUTTEN - De politie heeft zondagmiddag een 37-jarige inwoner van Putten aangehouden die even tevoren in een bosgebied een hond zou hebben gestoken met een zakmes.
Volgens de politie is de toedracht van de steekpartij nog onduidelijk. De hond is eigendom van en 33-jarige Nijkerkse die het dier uitliet bij Krachtighuizenkern. Daar kwam ze de verdachte tegen die ook zijn honden uitliet.
De honden van de Nijkerse liepen op die van de verdachte af. Later bleek een van de honden ernstig gewond. Het dier is nog onder behandeling.
(Bron: http://www.omroepgelderland.nl/)
Amerikaanse rechter: HLS hoeft niet de namen van klanten te publiceren - Dierenrechtenorganisatie verzocht om publicatie
Huntingdon Life Sciences' Customer Names Will
Not Be Released, Judge Rules
29-09-2009 By Jim Edwards, Bnet, USA
A federal court ruling ordering the release of more than 1,000 pages of records on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s investigation of Huntingdon Life Sciences will not reveal the names of companies doing business with HLS.
Drug companies — such as Novartis and its Sandoz generics unit — will breathe a sigh of relief at that news. Animal rights activists recently burned down Novartis CEO Daniel Vasella’s country house, stole his mother’s ashes and vandalized his family grave in protest at Novartis’ past association with HLS. HLS is a contract testing lab where drug companies get studies done on animals.
Novartis has insisted that it no longer uses HLS, but activists believe the company still does business there. HLS has branches in Princeton, N.J., and the U.K. Activists placed a butane gas can bomb on the premises of a Novartis office on Sept. 22,
and making threatening phonecalls to Novartis employees in the middle of the night.
Any ruling requiring USDA documents to be released on HLS ran the risk of naming HLS’s customers. But the ruling — in a Freedom of Information Act case filed by In Defense of Animals – will keep HLS client names redacted. It states that IDA agreed not to ask for those names:
IDA “agreed to forgo test protocols and protocol amendments; animal tracking and assessment records; the identification of any compound or product; and the identity of any customer of HLS; and dosing charts.”
The IDA wants the records because it believes veterinary care at the labs has been inadequate.
(Bron: http://industry.bnet.com/)
(Bron foto: Bnet)
Whale Freed from Shark Net in Australia
A humpback whale was spotted tangled in nets early Sunday by a lifeguard on Queensland's Gold Coast. Read a complete story here.
Man in London, Ontario (Canada), vangt met zijn handen een krokodil in vijver in stad
Man captures roaming crocodile in pond
29-09-2009 Posted By JOE MATYAS, SUN MEDIA, The Chatham Daily News, Canada
Wrestling with financial portfolios for clients wouldn't seem to be a suitable background for taming an alligator.
But it is if you're John Stephan.
Stephan, regional manager for the Synergy Group and a resident of northeast London, looked very much like famous Australian crocodile hunter Steve Irwin yesterday when he captured a roaming reptile with his bare hands, carried it a distance of about 75 meters and made sure its mouth was taped shut.
"My wife's going to tell me I'm crazy," said the man who made the job of London Animal Care Centre staff easier yesterday.
Stephan was walking his two-year-old Shi-Tzu, named Gunner, around the storm pond in the Cedar Hollow subdivision southeast of Fanshawe Rd. and Highbury Ave. at about 2:30 p. m. yesterday when he saw two television crews and other onloookers gathered around the pond.
"I asked what was going on and I was told there was a small crocodile or alligator in the pond," he said. "There had been sightings of it and it had been filmed and photographed."
Stephan said he decided to look for the creature on the south side of the pond, away from the onlookers, "because I noticed it was reedy over there."
When he got to the reeds, he followed a slithery trail in the muck until he found an alligator sunning itself on a bed of weeds.
"It wasn't moving," he said. "I came up to it from behind, reached down and grabbed it with my bare hands."
The creature, later identified by an exotic wildlife specialist as a "spectacled or common caiman", started to wriggle and put up a fight, said Stephan.
"I think it was a bit listless because of the cold. But when I picked it up, it struggled to free itself. I wasn't going to let go, though. I've got big strong hands and I kept a tight grip on it."
Stephan walked with the caiman, a relative of the alligator, about 75 meters to an A Channel truck, where he asked television reporter Nick Paparella to get some duct tape and tape the mouth of the creature shut.
Stephan then sat in a vehicle with the caiman until London animal control staff arrived to take it away.
Animal control staff had been looking for the creature, which was about a metre in length and five kilograms in weight, the day before, said Stephan.
"I saw two of the near the pond with those capture poles with wires on them, but I thought it was routine business."
Stephan said Gunner followed him during the capture and didn't make any fuss.
"I was business as usual for him," he said. "He didn't seem to be scared or anything like that."
Kent Lattanzio, director of operations for the London Animal Care Centre, said calls were received Sunday morning from residents in the Killarney Rd. area who believed they had seen a small crocodile or alligator.
Animal control officers were dispatched to assess the situation but they weren't able to capture or confine it.
After Stephan caught it, the London centre called the Indian River Reptile Zoo in Peterborough, a licensed reptile zoo, to take it away.
Under London bylaws, it's prohibited to keep animals that live in the wild as pets, said Lattanzio.
"About five % of the bylaw complaints that we receive involve such exotic creatures as tropical birds, snakes and things like crocodiles, alligators and caimans," he said. "But we usually find them in a residence in aquariums or cages."
The normal procedure is to inform people about the bylaw prohibition and to issue a dated compliance order, he said. If they don't comply, they can be charged and fined under the provincial offences act, he said.
Bry Loyst, curator of the Indian River zoo, said people often buy crocodiles, alligators and caimans when they're small, but they don't want them when they grow larger.
"That's when they try to get rid of them," he said.
Such reptiles generally don't fare very well in captivity, he said, adding they usually die in the first year.
"They're basically carnivores from central and south America. They eat birds, fish, small animals and insects and they don't get that kind of diet in captivity. The people who buy them don't know how to take care of them."
Loyst said caiman captured in London yesterday will be quarantined for "six months to a year" in the Peterborough zoo before it's allowed near other creatures.
"We have to monitor its condition and make sure it's healthy," he said.
(Bron: http://www.chathamdailynews.ca/)
Kritische blik op de wereldwijde misleidende proefdierindustrie van anti-vivisectie organisatie in Pittsburgh (VS)
Animal Testing: Local Exploitation - Global Ruin
29-09-2009 Pittsburgh Association for the Abolition of Vivisection [PAAV], USA
This information was composed by Pittsburgh Association for the Abolition of Vivisection (PAAV) in September of 2009 in response to the G20 summits as a workshop to educate people about the vast effects of animal research. Due to confiscations of tents at the Climate Camp and various other rights abuses by the state, the workshop did not occur. The following is what would have been presented.
When some people think of the opposition to animal testing, they think of a very specific issue with a very narrow focus. However, the animal research industry affects not only other animals, but also humans and the planet. The negative consequences of state-funded nonhuman animal research reach far and wide from the local to the global. Following are just a few examples of these connections.
ANIMAL TESTING LOCALLY
Animal Abuse. The amount of animal suffering within local labs is immeasurable. In buildings throughout Pittsburgh [1], animals are imprisoned inside to fulfill research interests, fill corporate and researcher pockets, and put out publications to promote an idea of prowess for the facilities and their researchers. Animals’ heads are cut open and implants are placed in their brains, monkeys and rats are addicted to drugs, rats and mice are placed on hot plates or in electric shock chambers to study pain, cats are given spinal cord injuries, and dogs are cut open. The procedures done on these animals are approved by the very people who exploit them for this cruel research [6]. There is no escape for these beings that spend their miserable lives suffering for science.
Worker abuse. It is not only the animals who suffer. The lower level workers who care for the animals are also exploited. Workers in facilities in Pittsburgh are often treated as commodities just like the other animals are. Their safety, interests, and well being come second to the research industry. Take for instance a woman bitten and injured badly by an imprisoned monkey at Pitt [2]. She explained, "I was thrown in there and not taught anything…” Other sources have said that when the incident happened, the woman had trouble getting an ambulance or getting to an emergency room. There was danger from the diseases she could have been exposed to, but the heads of these facilities wanted to cover for themselves. This is the story of one of many workers who is exploited alongside other animals in these labs. As you can guess, the public was never told what happened to the monkey in the incident.
ANIMAL TESTING GLOBALLY
Bad science. We all suffer worldwide due to the misguided claims of animal researchers. Did you ever notice that we hear about a new breakthrough every day in animal science and then hear nothing more? This is because nonhuman animal research does not predict human response [3]. Most things that are safe in other animals are not safe for humans (i.e, thalidomide, trovan, etc) and many things that are tossed out because they do not work in other animals can work in humans (i.e. penicillin, aspirin, etc). The dilemma of nonhuman animal research is that it hurts humans more than it helps due to the great differences between species at the cellular level.
International “Aid”. Due in part to the misleading and dangerous results of nonhuman animal research, pharmaceutical and chemical companies test their products on impoverished areas of the world or in poorer communities to better hide any negative results. This year, Pfizer agreed to pay out $75 million to Nigeria [4] due to a drug they tested there in 1996 which killed children in the country. This drug, Trovan, proved “safe and effective” in nonhuman animals. Unfortunately, these misleading results serve as a safety net for these companies rather than evidence against them. A company can always find at least one species of animal on which tests show their product to be safe. On top of this, global structures like the IMF, World Bank, and the World Health Organization (WHO), that promote free- trade policies, privatization of health care, and pharmaceutical patent protections, allow various abuses like this to occur worldwide in “underdeveloped” nations.
Costly “treatments” rather than simple prevention. Many animal researchers study manipulations and treatments for diseases in nonhuman animals while very little money is put into actual research with humans. Preventative measures and decent health care can create massive positive changes regarding problems of disease and ill health.
Money makers make the laws. If an “average Joe/Jane” was found severing the spinal cords of cats and letting them live that way in his/her basement before killing them [5,6] or if s/he injected wild monkeys with AIDS and malaria and let them suffer to death[7], people would call him/her cruel and sadistic and the s/he would likely go to jail in most areas of the world. However, for animal researchers, these laws and ethics do not apply. Big money making structures like the vivisection industry are able to surpass ethics and laws that would apply to every day citizens as long as they do so behind closed doors, with tax payer money.
Rising Costs despite the odds. Because the animal testing industry is so successful at misinformation, animal testing is actually growing in many areas of the world, despite many developments of viable alternatives that are more accurate in predicting human response. For instance, in the UK, recent animal testing numbers rose 14% last year despite promises to reduce the use of nonhuman animals in research [8].
Protecting Industry. Animal research often serves as a way to make money from diseases. For instance, recent bird flu and swine flu strains arose from farming conditions of animal agriculture. The solution to these problems is to eliminate (or at least reduce) the consumption and farming of other animals. However, rather than suggest such a thing, pharmaceutical companies jump on the chance to create a new vaccine. During the recent swine flu scares, many pharmaceutical companies were given immunity from any repercussions of faulty vaccine making [9].
Animal studies often seek to keep in place the very things that destroy us and our planet- dangerous chemicals, cruelty, exploitation, genetic modification, pollutants, and so on.
Sources: [1] http://pittaav.blogspot.com/2009/01/campaign.html, [2] David Templeton, “Monkey bites Pitt lab technician: Victim questions safety measures, says career's in doubt“, [3] Niall Shanks, Ray Greek, Jean Greek, “Are Animal Models Predictive for Humans?” [4] “Pfizer to pay out $75 million over 1996 drug trial deaths”, [5] Get to know your local laboratories: The Yates Lab http://pittaav.com/, [6] What’s new in the Yates Laboratory? http://pittaav.com/, [7] Get to know your local laboratories: Murphey-Corb and the Primate Research Center for Infectious Disease http://pittaav.com/, [8] Gabriel Huntley “Record Rise in Animal Experiments”, [9] “Legal Immunity set for Swine Flu Vaccine Makers” at foodconsumer.org
(Bron: http://pittaav.blogspot.com/)
(Bron foto's: PAAV)
Ermelo is 'overlast' wilde zwijnen zat - De jacht op de dieren is geopend....
Ermelo jaagt op grote populatie wilde zwijnen
29-09-2009 door Paul Hartman, De Stentor
ERMELO - Ermelo gaat op zwijnenjacht. Vooral in het noordelijk deel van het dorp worden inwoners in toenemende mate geconfronteerd met opdringerige en - naar verluid - agressieve wilde zwijnen. De gemeente Ermelo wil de zwijnenoverlast een halt toeroepen en heeft daarom toestemming gevraagd aan de provincie Gelderland om de jacht te openen op de dieren.
De zwijnenjacht wordt uitgevoerd door de bijzondere opsporingsambtenaren (boa's). Zij gaan verschillende keren 's nachts op pad om de dieren op de korrel te nemen. De jagers hebben geen quotum meegekregen. "Het belangrijkste is dat de overlast zoveel mogelijk wordt ingedamd", aldus burgemeester Wiert Omta.
De wilde zwijnen houden zich op in het bosgebied Laman Trip. Ook laten de dieren zich met enige regelmaat zien op aanliggende wegen, zoals de Fazantlaan, de Eendenparkweg en de Harderwijkerweg. De zwijnen blijken onverzettelijk. Ondanks het lawaai van verkeer en stemgeluid blijven die beesten zitten waar ze zitten. Ermelo vindt het daarom de hoogste tijd om actie te ondernemen.
(Bron: http://www.destentor.nl/)
Belgische dierenrechtenorganisatie GAIA promoot in 2010 'humane' wijze doden kreeften: de CrustaStun
GAIA lanceert toestel dat kreeften doodt met
stroomstoot
29-09-2009 Het Laatste Nieuws, Belgium
Dierenrechtenorganisatie GAIA zal volgend jaar een nieuw toestel promoten dat kreeften doodt met enkele stroomstoten. Tot nu worden de dieren levend gekookt.
"Het apparaat, de CrustaStun, is een minder pijnlijke en dus humanere manier om de dieren te doden", zegt Michel Vandenbosch. De Britse uitvinder Simon Buckhaven zegt bovendien dat 'blinde' proeftests uitgewezen hebben dat het vlees lekkerder is. (belga/ka)
(Bron: http://www.hln.be)
(Bron foto: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/foodanddrink/recipes/4581872/A-humane-way-to-cook-lobster.html)
Twee van ruim twintig uit Avifauna, Alphen a/d Rijn, gestolen vogels terug - Zeldzame Montserrat troepialen na tip licht gehavend gevonden
Zeldzame vogels terug in Avifauna
29-09-2009 NOS
Twee zeldzame vogels die uit het Avifauna in Alphen aan den Rijn waren gestolen zijn terecht. De Montserrat troepialen verdwenen twee weken geleden samen met zo'n twintig andere vogels.
De politie kwam de dieren op het spoor nadat iemand het Avifauna had getipt. Een woordvoerder zegt dat de vogels te weinig te eten gekregen hebben. Het vrouwtje had last van een pootje en het mannetje mist een staartveer.
Van de meeste andere vogels, waaronder een stel koningglansspreeuwen, twa twa's en enkele vorkstaartscharrelaars is nog geen spoor ontdekt. In het wild leven nog ongeveer 500 Montserrat troepialen.
(Bron: http://www.nos.nl/)
maandag 28 september 2009
Minister Verburg (LNV) past regeling minimale stahoogte tijdens transport koeien en varkens aan
Runderen niet langer dubbeldeks geladen, varkens
niet meer driedeks
28-09-2009 AgriHolland
Op basis van gesprekken met de veehouderijsector en de Dierenbescherming heeft minister Verburg van LNV besloten de regeling voor de minimale stahoogte tijdens transport van dieren aan te passen. Daardoor zullen runderen veelal niet meer dubbeldeks geladen mogen worden, en slachtzeugen niet meer driedeks. Verburg schrijft dat in een brief aan de Tweede Kamer.
De Transportverordening vereist dat er voldoende ruimte boven de dieren dient te zijn om voor een adequate ventilatie boven de dieren te zorgen wanneer deze in hun natuurlijke houding rechtop staan zonder dat zij gehinderd worden in hun natuurlijke bewegingen. Er waren echter geen concrete normen waardoor preventief optreden lastig was. Begin juli 2009 zijn daarom concrete normen in de beleidsregels opgenomen.
Praktisch onuitvoerbaar
Na de bekendmaking van de beleidsregels bleek dat de hierin opgenomen normen niet of onvoldoende wetenschappelijk onderbouwd en praktisch uitvoerbaar waren. Gelet op de omvang van de consequenties van de opgenomen normen heeft Verburg besloten de beleidsregels op te schorten en in nader overleg te treden met partijen van de sector en de Dierenbescherming om te onderzoeken of een andere invulling van het doelvoorschrift de geconstateerde problematiek en de praktische problemen kon voorkomen.
In het overleg heeft de sector aangegeven dat het onverkort toepassen van de beleidsregels betekent dat een deel van de voertuigen niet meer voldoet voor diervervoer en dat dit zal leiden tot extra kosten en meer transportkilometers.
Daarnaast is aangedrongen om in de beleidsregels uit te gaan van schofthoogte en niet van de kruin omdat de hoogte van de kruin niet eenduidig is vast te stellen. De Dierenbescherming is de mening toegedaan dat ondanks het ontbreken van een wetenschappelijke onderbouwing toch moet worden vastgehouden aan de eerder opgenomen normen.
Besluiten
Op basis van de gesprekken heeft Verburg de volgende besluiten genomen:
Runderen
De minimale vrije ruimte boven de schoft van het hoogste dier moet bij runderen tenminste 10 centimeter bedragen. Het gevolg hiervan zal zijn dat, afhankelijk van de vrije ruimte in het vervoermiddel, in een groot aantal gevallen runderen niet meer dubbeldeks geladen mogen worden.
Slachtzeugen
De stahoogte voor slachtzeugen moet minimaal 110 centimeter bedragen. Het gevolg hiervan zal zijn dat, afhankelijk van de vrije ruimte in het vervoermiddel, in de meeste gevallen slachtzeugen niet meer driedeks geladen kunnen worden.
Overige diercategorieën
Bij het transport van de overige diercategorieën (biggen, slachtvarkens, schapen en geiten) zijn door de AID en Voedsel en Waren Autoriteit geen problemen inzake stahoogte geconstateerd. Om deze reden heeft Verburg besloten vooralsnog geen nadere normen voor de overige diercategorieën op te nemen totdat onderzoek is uitgevoerd.
Wetenschappelijke onderbouwing normen
Omdat er onvoldoende wetenschappelijke gegevens zijn om op basis hiervan te kunnen besluiten welke minimale ruimte of stahoogte voldoet aan de voorwaarden uit de transportverordening heeft Verburg de Animal Sciences Group, onderdeel van Wageningen UR, opdracht gegeven te onderzoeken welke ruimte of stahoogte minimaal nodig is om te voldoen.
Hoogte vrachtwagen
Er is een aantal vervoermiddelen dat de beschikking heeft over een uitschuifbaar dak waardoor de de hoogte van de wagen kan variëren van 4.00 tot 4.30 meter. De Wegenverkeerswet staat echter niet toe dat een vervoermiddel hoger is dan 4.00 meter. Bij het berekenen van de minimale ruimte of stahoogte wordt uitgegaan van een maximale hoogte van de wagen van 4.00 meter.
Door deze normen te hanteren verwacht Verburg dat veel van de geconstateerde problemen ten aanzien van het niet preventief kunnen optreden in twijfelgevallen, kunnen worden voorkomen. Op basis van het resultaat van het onderzoek en het overleg hierover met de sector en de Dierenbescherming zal de minister bezien of en zo ja op welke wijze de gewijzigde beleidsregels aangepast en uitgebreid dienen te worden.
bron: Ministerie van LNV, 28/09/09
(Bron: http://www.agriholland.nl/)
(Bron foto: archief Kraaijer)
Partij voor de Dieren Zeeland wil dat jachthut aan Doorndijk bij Axel verdwijnt
Roep om verwijdering jachthut
28-09-2009 Provinciale Zeeuwse Courant
AXEL - De werkgroep Zeeland van de Partij voor de Dieren wil dat de gemeente Terneuzen een volgens hen illegaal geplaatste 'jachthut' aan de Doorndijk bij Axel laat verwijderen.
Afgelopen voorjaar heeft de eigenaar van de jachthut het bouwsel na een brief van de gemeente verwijderd, maar na de oogst is de hut weer teruggezet.
De eigenaar heeft inmiddels een bouwaanvraag ingediend voor een 'schuilhut voor dieren'.
(Bron: http://www.pzc.nl/)
Europese Circus Associatie spant proces aan tegen Oostenrijk en stad Luxemburg wegens het verbod op dieren in circus
European Circus Association Strijdt tegen
Verboden op Optredende Dieren
28-09-2009 PRNewswire, UK
BRUSSEL, België, September 28 /PRNewswire/ -- De Europese Circus Associatie (ECA) heeft vandaag bekend gemaakt processen aan te gaan spannen tegen Oostenrijk en de Stad Luxemburg, om in te gaan tegen hun verboden op dieren in het circus.
De President van de ECA, Urs Pilz, deelde dit mee bij het Europese Parlement waar de ECA en haar partners aan het Lid van het Europese Parlement Doris Pack, Voorzitter van de Commissie voor Cultuur en Educatie, een rapport overhandigden aangaande komende stappen m.b.t. de circusresolutie van 2005, waarin de wenselijkheid van verdergaande erkenning van het klassieke circus, inclusief het optreden van dieren, als onderdeel van de Europese cultuur, staat beschreven.
"We hebben er bijna vijf jaar op gewacht dat de Europese Commissie haar verantwoordelijkheid zou nemen om het Oostenrijkse verbod aan te pakken," zei dhr. Pilz. "Het recht om goedverzorgde dieren onder goede voorwaarden t.a.v. welzijn in het klassieke circus in Europa op te laten treden moet voor eens en voor altijd worden vastgesteld. Gelijke behandeling van de circusgemeenschap en het handhaven van de wet betekent ook dat verboden, ingesteld door plaatselijke autoriteiten zoals de Stad Luxemburg, moeten worden ingetrokken."
Oostenrijk deed een verbod op niet-gedomesticeerde dieren in het circus uitgaan in januari 2005. De Europese Commissie besloot dat het Oostenrijkse verbod een schending van Artikel 49 van het Europese Verdrag inhield en spande een rechtszaak aan tegen Oostenrijk. Echter, onder druk van dierenrechten activisten liet de Commissie de zaak vallen. In juni 2009 rondde de Europese Ombudsman zijn onderzoek af en concludeerde dat de Commissie "haar rol als Bewaker van het Verdrag had verzaakt." Hij deed de aanbeveling aan de Commissie om de zaak weer op te nemen of een wettig geldende reden aan te geven waarom zij dit niet wilde doen.
Dhr. Pilz benadrukte dat overal in Europa het optreden van dieren in het circus steeds populairder wordt. Gegevens vanuit de Irish Arts Council laten zien dat in 2006 meer Ieren een bezoek brachten aan het circus dan aan opera, moderne dans en ballet tezamen. Onafhankelijk marktonderzoek, wees uit dat 6,4 miljoen Duitsers in 2006 of 2007 een circus bezochten. Een onderzoek in 2008 onder willekeurig gekozen mensen uit het publiek, toont aan dat 86% van de bevraagde personen menen dat dieren een essentieel onderdeel uitmaken van het circus.
De ECA gaf andermaal te kennen dat haar zeer veel gelegen is aan het welzijn van dieren. Zij kondigde ook een nieuw Gelofte programma aan, waarbij leden van de ECA zich verplichten om rapport uit te brengen aan het publiek over hun inspanningen en haar intentie om ieder jaar een Europees circus aan te wijzen voor zijn uitzonderlijke prestaties en innovatie m.b.t. de zorg voor dieren .
(Bron: http://www.prnewswire.co.uk/)
(Bron foto's: http://www.ecapress.info/)
Lederschildpad zwemt voor kust Texel - Pas 3e melding ooit van levende lederschildpad voor Nederlandse kust
Levende lederschildpad voor de kust van Texel
28-09-2009 De Telegraaf
TEXEL - Voor de kust van Texel is zondag een levende lederschildpad gesignaleerd. Dat heeft Ecomare, centrum voor de Wadden en de Noordzee, maandag bekendgemaakt.
Het dier is gezien en gefotografeerd tussen Texel en Den Helder. Volgens een woordvoerster van Ecomare is het heel bijzonder dat het dier in de Noordzee zwemt. „Het is de derde melding ooit van een levende lederschildpad voor de Nederlandse kust”, aldus de zegsvrouw.
Opmerkelijk is ook dat er vorige week een dode lederschildpad op het strand van Den Helder werd gevonden.
Ecomare probeert met onderzoekers van het National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) een verband te vinden voor deze twee meldingen in korte tijd. „We zijn zelf ook nog een beetje beduusd van deze meldingen en hebben nog geen directe verklaring”, aldus de woordvoerster van Ecomare.
Op dit moment zijn er veel kwallen in de Noordzee. „Lederschilpadden leven van kwallen. Misschien komen de dieren op het vele voedsel af”, aldus de zegsvrouw. Volgens diegene die de schildpad heeft gezien, was het dier bijna 2 meter groot en erg actief.
(Bron: http://www.telegraaf.nl/)
(Bron foto: http://www.ecomare.nl/)
Managers wildpark Sabi Sands (Zuid-Afrika) laten olifant twee weken lijden met bevallingscomplicaties - Animal Rights Africa woedend
Animal Protection Organisations and Government
Work Together to End Suffering of Female
Elephant in Sabi Sands
28-09-2009 Animal Rights Africa, South Africa
Animal Rights Africa (ARA) was appalled by the news that managers at the prestigious private game reserve, Sabi Sands, adjoining Kruger National Park, had allowed an elephant cow to suffer for over two weeks with what appear to be birth complications. The ongoing suffering of the elephant has been viewed by millions of people across the world via a live internet channel.
ARA contacted the reserve head to ascertain why nothing was being done to help the animal and was told that the reserve followed a policy of “non-intervention” in cases where animal suffering or distress were the result of natural processes.
“I spoke to Jurie Moolman of Sabie Sands who informed me of their reserve’s non-intervention policy which precluded him from assisting the suffering elephant in any way,” said Steve Smit, spokesperson for ARA. “I disagreed with his reasoning, after which he undertook to bring up the matter with the reserve’s ecological management committee at a meeting later today (September 29, 2009)”.
“Moolman said he was aware that the elephant was suffering and that it was very distressing for him to know this, but his hands were tied in terms of a management agreement with SANParks and the KNP whereby Sabie Sands is compelled not to intervene in cases like this,” Smit said.
“I immediately phoned Dr David Mabunda, CEO of SANParks who informed me that under no circumstances would SANParks support a management policy that permitted the prolonged suffering of any animal in the wild, irrespective of the cause of that suffering. He added that in a case such as this one concerning the elephant cow, Sabie Sands has access to the veterinary and other assistance of Kruger Park, and that this assistance should have been called for as soon as the suffering of the elephant became known. Dr Mabunda assured me that he would immediately look into the matter. He called back a short while later to tell me that the head Kruger Park vet was dealing with the matter and that he expected the issue to be resolved soon in the most humanely practical manner.”
Smit said that ARA was heartened by the prompt response of SANParks which showed that the welfare of individual animals and a duty to care is an important component of their management plan.
We were also pleased to learn that the NSPCA was taking the matter very seriously and had telephonically notified Moolman that they would consider legal action against Sabie Sands if it was shown that their actions so far were in contravention of the Animal Protection Act.
(Bron: http://www.animalrightsafrica.org/)
Jaarlijkse ezelmarkt in Kanotta, Jaipur (India) - Vraag naar ezels neemt af - Markt grootste in Azië
Annual donkey fair in Jaipur
28-09-2009 From ANI, Daily India, India
Jaipur, Sep 28: The annual four-day long donkey fair, which began on Saturday in Jaipur, was a huge draw on Sunday. Donkeys were brought from various parts of northern India for sale. Some of the donkey sellers were doing brisk sales with their slick sales pitch.
"This animal is popular because it is very hardworking and helps in a number of ways," said Jeevan Ram, a donkey seller.
The fair, which is held near the temple of Goddess Khalkani, has also been attracting horses and mules also for the last few years.
The traditional donkey fair being held in Kanotta village is 500 years old. But with increased mechanization donkey is losing its importance as the beast of burden.
The demand for donkeys has been falling.
"There is a decrease in the number of donkeys because the government is not providing any assistance in breeding of these animals...earlier their procreation rate was high but these days their population is decreasing," said Harishankar, a donkey buyer.
The fair offers many attractions for the visitors. These include unique competitions and races of the beasts with winners being awarded prizes. The winning beasts also fetch a good price at the fair.
Legend has it that the fair is a celebration for the Goddess Khalkani.
According to folklore a brave landlord Chanda Meena rescued a princess in distress, who in turn accepted him as her brother. The princess had a notorious son, Malay Singh, and Chanda Meena decided to teach him a lesson.
He asked Malay Singh to take a donkey laden with a bagful of gold coins for the ruler of Delhi. As he reached the temple of Goddess Khalkani, his greed got the better of him.
When he opened the bag, he found stones instead of coins. A panicky Malay Singh, thinking he would be held responsible for the disappearance of the coins, worshipped the goddess in the temple. The stones turned to gold miraculously. Since then, the donkey fair is organized to commemorate the miracle.
(Bron: http://www.dailyindia.com/)
Autoriteiten Dubai nemen huiden bedreigde diersoorten in beslag - Onder huiden onder andere huiden vier pythons en twee Nijlkrokodillen
DM seizes Dhs19,400 worth of endangered
animal skin
28-09-2009 WAM Emirates News Agency, Dubai
WAM Dubai, Sept 28, 2009 (WAM) -- The Dubai Municipality has seized skins of endangered animals worth Dhs19,400 during a surprise inspection of various veterinary establishments and shops selling antiques.
The confiscated materials include skins of four Pythons and two Nile crocodiles, both fall within the provisions of CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species). The skins were up to 9 meters in length.
Eng. Hashim Al Awadhi, Head of Veterinary Services Section said the Section plays an important role in implementing the terms of the CITES in regulating the international trade of flora and fauna that are at risk of extinction.
Al Awadhi said that the Veterinary Services Section takes extra efforts to educate the public and those who work in the pet shops and shops that sell souvenirs on the provisions of CITES, endangered animals, the purpose of protecting these animals and organizing their trade through CITES certificates to be provided in case of purchase or sale.
The Section organizes lectures and awareness campaigns, including that of the Think Twice campaign in cooperation with the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW).
The public has been requested to call the toll-free number 800900 in the event of any irregularities with respect to this matter.
(Bron: http://www.wam.org.ae/)
International TIGER Day 2009! September 27th
TIGERS: Majestic, powerful, beautiful, ENDANGERED! September 27th 2009 marks the 9 year anniversary of International Tiger Day. Started by the Phoenix Fund, a Russian non-governmental organization in 2000, the celebration of all things TIGER is now an annual city holiday in Vladivostock with 300+ participants!
To help celebrate International Tiger Day 2009, Big Cat Rescue is discounting their tour price by 10% from Sept 27th - Oct 3rd, to anyone who mentions the words "tiger conservation" or "international tiger day". Also for all orders of $50 or more in our online pro store, customers will receive a free plush tiger!
Visit our online store here: http://www.bigcatrescue.biz/servlet/S...
To donate please visit: http://www.bigcatrescue.org/donate.htm
Thank you to Tiger Awareness for the images of tigers in the wild: http://www.tigerawareness.co.uk/ and to Wildlife Heritage Foundation for the image of an Amur Leopard: http://www.whf.org.uk/
Thanks for watching and please join us in celebrating the TIGER!
Herten stropers in Lincolnshire (Engeland) gebruiken speciaal gefokte honden om herten te jagen en te doden
Dog gangs target deer in county
28-09-2009 BBC News, UK
Deer poachers in Lincolnshire are using specially-bred dogs to hunt with increasing frequency, police claim. Police officers in the county have stepped up weekend patrols to try to stop gangs going into the county to
hunt down deer with lamps and dogs.Pc Martin Green said the poaching gangs were using more aggressive tactics to hunt the animals.
Lurchers are being cross-bred with pit bull or Staffordshire Bull Terriers for "more stamina and strength", he said.
Four people were arrested by officers in the county over the weekend as police teams mounted an operation against poaching.
(Bron: http://news.bbc.co.uk/)
(Bron foto: BBC News)
Elanden in Minnesota (VS) bedreigd door klimaatverandering en parasieten - In noordoostelijke bossen Minnesota nog zo'n 7600 elanden
Warmer weather threatens moose in Minnesota
28-09-2009 Associated Press, KGW NewsChannel 8 Portland, USA
Researchers say climate change is threatening moose in Minnesota's northwoods.
Minnesota is one of the few strongholds for moose in the lower 48 states. Among other states with moose, only Alaska and parts of New England and the Rocky Mountains have large, stable populations.
Minnesota has an estimated 7,600 moose, nearly all in the forests of northeastern Minnesota. Plentiful swamps, lakes and streams provide good habitat there.
But scientists say the animals are beleaguered by increasingly warm weather and parasites such as brainworms, ticks and liver flukes.
The chairman of Minnesota's Moose Advisory Committee, Rolf Peterson, says it's not exactly clear what's killing the moose because they are exposed to so many pathogens.
(Bron: http://www.kgw.com/)
Politie Maleisië onderschept bij Sungai Sarang Buaya smokkel 40 levende schubdieren ('pangolins') uit Indonesië
Special forces bust up pangolin smuggling op
28-09-2009 By HAMDAN RAJA ABDULLAH, The Star, Malaysia
MUAR: A general operation force (GOF) intelligence unit seized about 40 live pangolins, including several infants of the species, after a short car chase along Sungai Sarang Buaya late Sunday.
The six policemen from the sixth GOF battalion in Bakri also arrested a 24-year-old man in the 11pm incident on Sunday.
The unit, headed by Asst. Supt. Azha Ahmad, spent about four days staking out the river estuary before spotting two boats approaching the coast.
One boat returned to the sea after the other landed near the estuary. ASP Azha said two men then began loading sacks of live pangolins into a car before realising they were being watched and sped away.
“Our men gave chase and after about 100m the smuggler lost control of the car, which skidded into the river.
“The driver of the car managed to escape in the dark but his friend was arrested,” he said early Monday.
ASP Azha said the seized animals, with an estimated street value of over RM70,000, were surrendered to the Wildlife and National Parks Department here.
He said the captured suspect, from Kampung Parit Enam in Sungai Balang, had been detained to assist investigations into the smuggling of pangolins from Indonesia.
Pangolins are protected animals and the case will be investigated under the Wildlife Protection Act 1972, he added.
(Bron: http://thestar.com.my/)
(Bron foto: archief Kraaijer)
Twee mannen rijden in op groep wasbeertjes bij supermarkt in Half Moon Bay (VS) - Twee beertjes gedood - Wasbeertjes zoeken voedsel bij winkel
2 men sought for running over raccoons in
Half Moon Bay
28-09-2009 Bay City News Service, Times Star, USA
Police in Half Moon Bay are looking for two men who witnesses say purposely drove a car into a group of raccoons at a grocery store Saturday morning, killing at least two animals.
Witnesses told police the incident happened at about 5:40 a.m. near the loading bays behind a Safeway at state Highway 1 and Half Moon Bay Road, according to Sgt. Michael O'Malley. Police are seeking the men, who "accelerated over some raccoons," on suspicion of cruelty to animals, he said.
A large group of raccoons — a "gaze" — congregates at the Safeway at night and in the early morning, he said. They are attracted to the grocery store's dumpsters, he said, and some employees apparently feed the animals.
"It seems to be a raccoon haven there," O'Malley said. "It's their version of a McDonald's."
The car left two dead raccoons behind. O'Malley said other animals may have been injured before retreating.
Witnesses were able to give police a possible license plate number for the car, a dark blue Honda Civic, according to O'Malley. Half Moon Bay police are "having one of our sister agencies attempt contact with them," he said.
O'Malley declined to say in what town the plates are registered, but he did say police are referring the incident to San Mateo County's animal control and licensing department.
"They're more the experts in this type of situation," he said.
(Bron: http://www.insidebayarea.com/timesstar)
(Bron foto: http://www.ifyoulived.com/)
Grote politiemacht beschermt Britse konijnenfokker Highgate Farm tegen protest dierenactivisten - Fokker levert konijnen aan proefdiercentrum HLS
Famer's fear over protestors' attacks
28-09-2009 This Is Lincolnshire, UK
Officers from five police forces converged on a Lincolnshire farm where hundreds of animal rights protestors staged a demonstration.
Placards emblazoned with 'vivisection is vile' and 'does money justify murder' were brandished by many of the 400 campaigners descending on Normanby by Spital near Market Rasen.
The message was directed at Geoff Douglas, the owner of Highgate Farm, which supplies rabbits to controversial Huntingdon Life Sciences's labs in Cambridgeshire.
Animal rights campaigners say this is where they 'suffer and die in cruel, useless experiments'.
And on Saturday campaigners from across the UK joined the demonstration organised by the high -profile Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty.
While activists from the group have previously been convicted of affray and inciting violence and terror, there were no arrests made.
However, a 33-year-old protestor from the West Midlands, who asked remain anonymous, said this would be the first of many demonstrations at the farm.
"You're not going to get all these people today and then they're going to go away and forget about it," she said.
More than 100 officers were deployed to the demonstration from Nottinghamshire, Humberside, Leicestershire, Derbyshire and Lincolnshire forces.
Spokesman for Lincolnshire Police, Dick Holmes said: "We have invested a great deal of time and effort in planning an appropriate balanced response and policing the event in an impartial way."
(Bron: http://www.thisislincolnshire.co.uk/)
(Bron foto: http://northern-indymedia.org/articles/190)
zondag 27 september 2009
Spaanse dierenactivisten protesteren bij circus Holiday in Logroño voor gebruik dieren in piste
AnimaNaturalis en Logroño defiende a los animales
frente al Circo Holiday
27-09-2009 Anima Naturalis, Spain
Activistas de Animanaturalis han realizado una protesta frente al Circo Holiday y repartido información sobre los circos con animales a los ciudadanos. AnimaNaturalis
En el marco de nuestra campaña "Circos Sin Animales", AnimaNaturalis ha realizado una protesta frente al Circo Holiday instalado en Logroño, repartiendo información sobre la realidad que esconden los circos que usan animales.
AnimaNaturalis ha realizado varias acciones de protesta en diferentes pueblos de Cataluña, y algunos Ayuntamientos, como los de Lloret de Mar o Canet, ya han expresado que no volverán a permitir la instalación de circos que usen animales en su espectáculo.
“Con esta protesta, queremos pedir al Ayuntamiento de Logroño que considere la posibilidad de prohibir este tipo de circos, que en nada es educativo para los niños y es cruel con los animales”.
En el caso de los felinos, viven toda su vida encerrados, metidos dentro de un camión. Los animales son esclavizados de por vida para entretener al público, y obligados a vivir el resto de sus días en jaulas o atados con cadenas, y obligados a actuar bajo la amenaza constante de castigos psíquicos o físicos. Actúan solo a causa del miedo, cuanto más fieros son los animales, más duro es el castigo: barras de acero, látigos, picanas eléctricas, privación de agua y comida, y aislamiento son los "métodos de entrenamiento" que se utilizan.
Ciudades como Barcelona, Blanes, Sitges y Lleida ya no les permiten la entrada desde hace años.
AnimaNaturalis ha realizado protestas en Girona, Tarragona, Barcelona, Valencia, Alicante, Mallorca, Zaragoza, Logroño y Madrid.
¡Ponte en acción!
Más información sobre la campaña, consejos útiles, carteles para descargar y herramientas útiles, visita la web http://www.circos.org/.
Envía nuestra carta de protesta por las actuaciones programadas en diferentes ciudades de España del circo Ringling, un circo criminal que en Estados Unidos enfrenta cientos de denuncias por maltrato animal. Infórmate y actúa en este enlace.
(Bron: http://www.animanaturalis.org/)
(Bron foto's: Anima Naturalis)
10 Meter lange bultrugwalvis voor kust Miami, Queensland (Australië) na ruim 2 uur bevrijd uit haaiennet
Whale freed from shark nets
27-09-2009 Gold Coast, Australia
A WHALE caught in shark nets off Miami has been released by rescue crews this morning. Sea World and the Queensland Boating and Fisheries Patrol Marine Animal Release Team spent more than two hours trying to free the 10m humpback from the netting. It was released safely about 10.30am.
Crews believed it became trapped early this morning.
``It (the net) was very heavily wrapped around the head, the pectoral fin and the tail was completely twisted,'' said Sea World's head of Marine Sciences Trevor Long.
``The animal had done some barrel rolls to try and get it off.''
Mr Long said the whale became distressed and thrashed around as they were trying to free it.
``Unfortunately all that does is makes it harder,'' he said.
Mr Long said the whale was stuck in a net which had an alarm but it was unclear why he got so close.
``We don't know why they swim into the nets,'' he said.
Beach Coordinator Matt Davidson said it took officers just under three hours to free the badly-entangled animal.
The whale was a sub-adult humpback approximately eight metres in length," Mr Davidson said.
"The animal was near the surface throughout the release and had its head relatively free from the net so it could breathe easily."
A Queensland Boating and Fisheries Patrol Marine Animal Release Team, assisted by Seaworld officers, helped free the entangled animal.
Miami Beach Surf Life Saving Club captain Michael Colley said he spotted the animal when he was going out for surf at 5.45am.
"I was walking down the beach and noticed the mist from the blowhole coming out of the water and I thought: 'There's a whale out there'," he said.
"After about 15 minutes I noticed it kept blowing and hadn't moved anywhere, so I presumed something was wrong.
Mr Colley said he then signalled to an early morning patrol jet ski to check on the trapped animal.
"As it turned out, the animal was trapped, so it's fortunate we spotted it when we did," he said.
He said about 250 people were at the beach.
A Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries (DPIF) spokeswoman said their rescue team arrived 40 minutes after Mr Colley first reported the trapped animal.
This is the second whale to be caught in controlled shark nets on the Gold Coast in September.
A juvenile humpback was released from a shark net earlier this month.
However the DPIF spokeswoman said this wasn't out of the ordinary, as about four whales get trapped in shark nets each year.
"This is only the second whale to be caught during this migration season," she said.
"We generally get whales caught on the southern migration as when they're travelling they're bringing their calves down and tend to stick closer to the beach.
"This is also the peak moment of the season.
- Stephanie Bedo and AAP
(Bron: http://www.goldcoast.com.au/)
(Bron foto's: Gold Coast)
Man dringt binnen in berenverblijf dierentuin San Francisco (VS) - Indringer ongedeerd gearresteerd - Volgens dierentuin werken veiligheidsmaatregelen
Man unhurt after sneaking into SF Zoo grizzly area
27-06-2009 The Associated Press, The Herald, Monterey County, USA
SAN FRANCISCO, Calif.—Officials say a man is under arrest after he sneaked into the San Francisco Zoo's grizzly bear exhibit. The man had no contact with the bears and was rescued without major injury.
Zoo spokeswoman Gwendolyn Tornate says the man entered the exhibit—which is surrounded by glass walls and electric fencing—on Saturday night.
Tornate says a shooting team fired a warning shot to keep the bears at bay and staffers secured the animals inside their dens.
Tornate says the man was unresponsive but conscious and had no serious injuries.
The man was immediately taken into custody by police, who are investigating the incident.
On Christmas 2007, a 17-year-old boy was killed at the zoo by a tiger that escaped.
Mayor's spokesman Nathan Ballard says that Saturday's response shows that safety procedures are working.
(Bron: http://www.montereyherald.com/)
(Bron foto's: http://www.jmg-galleries.com/blog/2007/06/15/grizzly-bears-loose-in-san-francisco-almost/)
Droogte blijkt 'redding' voor honderden geiten in Bihar (India) - Bevolking koopt minder geiten voor offerfeesten
Drought saves sacrificial goats in Bihar
27-09-2009 Bombay News.Net, India
The drought in Bihar has come as a blessing in disguise for hundreds of goats. Many financially-battered people are not slaughtering them during Durga Puja and Dussehra.
After the devastating floods last year, an acute drought now is forcing people in rural areas to celebrate the festivals without fanfare.
Many of them are in fact still battling the after effects of the 2008 floods that left hundreds dead and destroyed houses of over three million people.
It is part of tradition to sacrifice goats to mark the festivals but fewer animals were bought for slaughter this time.
'We decided not to sacrifice a goat in view of the drought,' said Munna Singh, a villager in Aurangabad, one of 26 districts declared drought hit by the government.
Scanty rainfall has virtually destroyed the rice crops of Munna Singh and other farmers.
Ram Mohan Sharma, a villager in Jehanabad, another affected district, told IANS: 'The drought has saved the animals.'
Both Munna Singh and Sharma used to sacrifice goats each year in a bid to appease the gods. Now they lack the money to buy goats. And they are not the only ones.
All across Bihar's sprawling drought-hit region, there are similar stories.
The festivities have gone low key in Saharsa, Madhepura, Supaul, Araria and Purnea districts.
'A few people did offer the customary animal sacrifice,' said Bhagwan Bhaskar, a resident of Gaya district. But he noted that their number was minimal.
He said that in Magadh region, comprising five drought-affected districts, the number of animals sacrificed was hardly 10 percent of the usual quota.
Bihar recorded a rainfall deficit of 21 percent this monsoon. The situation improved following rains in August.
(Bron: http://www.bombaynews.net/)
1025 Mensen plaatsen in Den Haag handtekening voor ADC Burgerinitiatief voor verbod honden- en kattenexperimenten
Burgerinitiatief in de residentie
ADC heeft 17.800 handtekeningen op zak
27-09-2009 St. Anti Dierproeven Coalitie
1025 handtekeningen werden zaterdag opgehaald in de plaats waar het allemaal moet gaan gebeuren: Den Haag. Volgend jaar zal het parlement zich buigen over de motie van de Anti Dierproeven Coalitie om honden- en kattenexperimenten te verbieden.
Het is onbegrijpelijk dat elke dag nog honden- en katten lijden in Nederlandse en Belgische laboratoria. Deze dieren worden vergiftigd, opengesneden en gepijnigd. Dat de samenleving deze experimenten massaal afkeurt blijkt wel uit onze wekelijkse informatiestands in goed bezochte winkelcentra.
Op dit moment hebben 17.800 mensen het burgerinitiatief ondertekend! (40.000 handtekeningen zijn nodig om het burgerinitiatief van kracht te laten worden)
Waarom een verbod van experimenten op honden en katten en niet op muizen en ratten, wordt ons vaak gevraagd.
De Anti Dierproeven Coalitie keurt alle dierproeven af. Het is echter wel bizar dat honden en katten aan de ene kant op onze schoot zitten mee te kijken naar Popstars, terwijl ondertussen hun soortgenoten wegkwijnen in laboratoria. Als we honden en katten al niet zouden kunnen beschermen, welke dieren dan wel?
De Anti Dierproeven Coalitie zal nooit opgeven zolang dieren gebruikt worden in experimenten. Dieren hebben recht op een leven zonder pijn en angst. Het wordt hoog tijd dat de overheid haar verantwoordelijkheid neemt en stappen onderneemt om dierproeven uit te bannen.
Download hier het burgerinitiatiefformulier en help ons aan die 40.000 handtekeningen!
(Bron: http://www.stopdierproeven.org/)
(Bron foto's: St. Anti Dierproeven Coalitie)
Syrische bruine beer in dierentuin Stralsund (Duitsland) doodt vrouwtjes beer
Stralsund
Bär reißt Bärin vor Augen der Besucher
26-09-2009 Focus, Germany
Tödliches Ende einer Tier-WG: Vor den augen der Besucher hat Braunbär Balou im Stralsunder Tierpark seine Artgenossin Klara getötet.
Die Umstände des tragischen Vorfalls seien noch vollkommen unklar, sagte ein Sprecher der Stadt am Samstag. Das Gelände um das Bärengehege sei abgesperrt worden. Näheres wollte der Tierpark erst am Montag mitteilen. Die beiden Tiere sind laut Koslik die einzigen Braunbären in dem Zoo.
Kleinste Braunbären-Unterart
Der Tierpark hatte sich erst 2007 entschlossen, den seltenen und stark bedrohten Syrischen Braunbär zu halten. Vor anderthalb Jahren holte der Tierpark eigenen Angaben zufolge zunächst Klara aus dem Tierpark Gotha in das Stralsunder Bärengehege. Ein halbes Jahr später wurde im französischen Zoo Montpellier ein passender Partner für das Weibchen gefunden. Balou kam im Sommer 2008 nach Stralsund.
Die Tiere können zwischen 1,50 bis 2,60 Meter groß werden. Die Syrischen Braunbären sind die kleinste Braunbären-Unterart. In Deutschland wird diese Unterart nach Angaben des Tierparks nur in fünf Zoos gehalten.
(Bron: http://www.focus.de/)
(Bron foto: http://www.zoodirektoren.de/magazin/artikel.php?artikel=1728&type=&menuid=61&topmenu=58)
zaterdag 26 september 2009
Twee tijgers ontsnappen uit hun verblijf dierentuin Hunedoara (Roemenië) - Na 7 uur vrijheid worden dieren op het terrein van de dierentuin gevangen
Panic As Tigers Escape From Zoo Cage
26-09-2009 City Talk, Liverpool, UK
An investigation is underway after two tigers escaped from a zoo and went on the prowl for seven hours. Police and local hunters were brought in after the two big cats - named Dorinel and Siliva - fled their cage in the Romanian town of Hunedoara.
The zoo was evacuated and officers sealed off the area.
Emergency workers searched the three-hectare park, but hours went by and the beasts still had not been tracked down.
Officials were worried the animals may have jumped over the park fence and got into the town.
But, as night fell, a hunter spotted a pair of large bright eyes near a tree in the park.
Tranquillising darts were fired at the animals and soon Dorinel and Siliva were fast asleep.
They were carried back to their cage, and an investigation began into how they escaped.
The zoo's director Ciprian Hodor blamed local youths for the incident.
He said: "Children entered through the door used by employees for cleaning the cage.
"They unscrewed one of the screws on the back of the cage and left."
(Bron: http://www.citytalk.fm/)
Drie koeien dodelijk aangereden door taxi in Bergen - 10 Tot 15 koeien liepen 's nachts op weg
Taxi rijdt drie koeien dood in Bergen
26-09-2009 Nu.nl
AMSTERDAM – Drie koeien zijn overleden nadat ze waren aangereden door een taxi in Bergen. De chauffeur kreeg in de nacht van vrijdag op zaterdag de schrik van zijn leven toen er 10 tot 15 koeien voor zijn wagen opdoemden.
De kudde stak plotseling de weg over en de taxichauffeur kon niet meer uitwijken, meldt het Noord Hollands dagblad.
In totaal werden drie koeien door de taxi geraakt, één koe overleed meteen na de aanrijding, de twee andere sprongen in een sloot. De dieren waren er zo slecht aan toe dat een dierenarts ze heeft laten inslapen.
Opvallend genoeg raakte de taxichauffeur bij het ongeluk niet gewond. Zijn drie maanden oude taxi raakte wel zwaar beschadigd.
(Bron: http://www.nu.nl/)
Actie dierenactivisten Bite Back in Belgische Hasselt tegen ponymolens loopt uit de hand - Actievoerders krijgen rake klappen
Actie voor dierenrechten leidt tot gevecht op
Hasselt-kermis
26-09-2009 Het Belang van Limburg, Belgium
Op Hasselt-kermis is zaterdagmiddag een relletje ontstaan omdat actievoerders van dierenrechtenorganisatie Bite Back kwamen protesteren tegen ponymolens.
De foorkramers zouden agressief gereageerd gereageerd hebben toen een twintigtal manifestanten zich rond 15u op het kermisterrein begaven. Enkele actievoerders kregen rake klappen, actieborden (waarop te lezen stond: 'Ponymolens = dierenslavernij!') werden vernield en ook de camera van de dierenrechtenorganisatie zou ontvreemd zijn.
"Geen hersenloze machines"
Bite Back wil dat ponymolens afgeschaft worden. "Pony’s zijn geen hersenloze machines. Ze willen dartel door de wei lopen, vers gras eten en languit genieten in het zonnetje", staat te lezen op de site van de dierenrechtenorganisatie. Op de kermis in Leuven was een gelijkaardige actie, waar de situatie evenwel niet uit de hand liep.
Enkele actievoerders dienden klacht in bij de politie.
(Bron: http://www.hbvl.be/)
(Bron foto: Belang van Limburg)
vrijdag 25 september 2009
Save the Polar Bear
Twee Belgische kreeftenstropers bij Colijnsplaat beboet - Dertien kreeften verstopt in duikflessen
Belgen stoppen gestroopte kreeften in duikflessen
25-09-2009 Nieuws.nl
(Novum) - De Algemene Inspectiedienst heeft bij Colijnsplaat twee Belgen beboet voor het stropen van kreeften in de Oosterschelde. Ze hadden de dieren verstopt in duikflessen, meldt de dienst van het Ministerie van Landbouw.
Aanvankelijk konden de inspecteurs geen kreeften vinden in het bootje van de mannen. Toen ze de duikflessen demonteerden stuitten ze echter op dertien kreeften. De duikuitrustingen, het bootje en de telefoons van de Belgen zijn in beslag genomen. De kreeften zijn teruggezet.
Omdat er veel wordt gestroopt, is in Zuid-Nederland al enkele jaren een visstroperijteam van de Algemene Inspectiedienst actief. Wie meerdere malen wordt betrapt, kan uiteindelijk een boete van bijna zeventienduizend euro krijgen.
(Bron: http://binnenland.nieuws.nl/)
Gemeente Morgan, Uttah (VS), wil geen protest dierenactivisten bij nertsenfokker voor de deur
Morgan council supports mink ranchers, defines
picketing rules
25-09-2009 By Deanne Winterton (Standard-Examiner correspondent), Standard.net, USA
MORGAN — County officials are tightening picketing rules and expressing support of county ranchers in preparation for a scheduled mink farm protest in November.
“The basic premise is, someone may be allowed free speech rights and may be able to protest you or what you’re about or what you’re doing, but they shouldn’t be able to do that right in front of your house,” Morgan County Attorney Jann Farris said.
“Your right to enjoy your house and your property outweighs their rights to free speech. Your home is your castle, and you shouldn’t have to put up with it at your residence.”
Using wording patterned after a similar ordinance used in Salt Lake City, Farris drafted an ordinance that prohibits targeted picketing at a residence. Because many mink farmers live on their farms, the ordinance would affect a protest by the Salt Lake Animal Advocacy Movement scheduled for Nov. 28.
“They can go to a public park, or somewhere down the road if they are going to protest,” Farris said. “You shouldn’t have to sit in your living room and sit and watch people who don’t like you or agree with you walk up and down in front of your house.”
At the insistence of Morgan County council members, the draft was changed to prohibit picketing closer than 1,000 feet from the property line of the proposed target, instead of 100 feet. The change more adequately mirrored the rural nature of Morgan County, council members said.
However, if a residence is not on the same property as the mink farm, picketers could use the public right of way for their activities.
Failure to comply with the ordinance would result in a class B misdemeanor, punishable by six months in jail and a $1,000 fine.
The ordinance was written to protect “the public health, welfare and good order of the community,” according to the draft. Residents should “enjoy a feeling of well-being, tranquility, privacy and enjoy freedom from being a captive audience to unwanted speech in their home. The practice of targeted picketing causes emotional disturbance and distress that has the potential to incite breaches of the peace.”
“Sometimes these protest groups come in and try to stir up problems. If we can get them out of people’s front yards, it could help law enforcement,” Farris said. “Confrontation won’t be there if we send them down the road.”
In addition, picketers may be required to obtain a mass-gathering permit from county officials before staging a protest. The permit would allow law enforcement agencies to prepare for an influx of people on narrow county roads.
Local mink ranchers took passage of the ordinance as a sign of support, often applauding during the council’s discussion on the issue.
“We don’t have near enough hard-working people in this country. (Morgan mink farmers) are very good at what they do. They stay within the law and take abuse that is unfair,” Councilman Rodney Haslam said. “Whatever we can do to protect them, we need to do it.”
“This is for the purpose of helping the farmers as a whole. I can be sympathetic to your cause. You are an asset to the county and we want to pass an ordinance to help protect you,” Council Chairman Sid Creager said.
“I know the hardship (protests) create. In a matter of 10 to 15 minutes, an entire career gets turned upside down. That’s the last thing we want to have happen.”
Morgan City will likely pass its own targeted picketing ordinance in the near future, Farris said.
(Bron: http://www.standard.net/)
Someone shot this kitten in Fort Wayne, Indiana (US), point-blank, in the spine with a BB-gun - Her hind legs, tail and bladder are paralyzed
Help to find the person who committed this crime of animal cruelty
Someone shot this kitten, point-blank, in the spine with a BB-gun then abandoned her at a dumpster behind a shopping center at Maplecrest and Stellhorn Roads in Fort Wayne on Friday, Sept 18, 2009. The BB is lodged in her spine. Her hind legs, tail and bladder are paralyzed.
If you have any information on who committed this crime of animal cruelty, please contact the Fort Wayne Police Dept desk sgt at 260-427-1222 and e-mail Helping Paws Pet Haven: kitties@hpph.org.
LCA takes to the air to locate illegal puppy mill breeders in San Bernadino County (USA)
On June 30th, 2009, LCA's SIU responded to a plea for help to locate illegal puppy mill dogs in the San Bernadino County desert. Fortunately, LCA's investigators did not find any more illegal dog breeding in area in question.
To help LCA continue it's investigations into illegal dog breeding, please donate generously.
Uit Frans circus gestolen leeuwenwelpjes gevonden
Gestolen leeuwenwelpen teruggevonden
25-09-2009 De Morgen, Belgium
Bijna een week na de diefstal van twee leeuwenwelpen in Frankrijk zijn de vijf maanden oude dieren teruggevonden. De dieven hadden mogelijk angst voor hun eigen buit gekregen en lieten de dieren los, aldus Le Parisien.
100 kilometer verderop
De circusdirecteur had een van de twee kleine leeuwinnen in een bos in Blois gevangen, waar het circus stond opgesteld. "Ik riep Chimène bij haar naam, en ze kwam naar me toegelopen en streek zich neer aan mijn voeten", vertelde Renato-Arsène Cagniac.
De tweede leeuwenwelp bevond zich 100 kilometer verder in een bos in de omgeving van Parijs. Van de dieven ontbreekt elk spoor.
(Bron: http://demorgen.be/)
Gasunie stuit tijdens werkzaamheden bij Oranjekanaal, Drenthe, restanten een of meer mammoeten en wolharige neushoorn
Resten mammoet gevonden in Drenthe
25-09-2009 De Pers
Gasunie is bij werkzaamheden in Drenthe op resten van een of meer mammoeten en een wolharige neushoorn gestuit. De resten uit de ijstijd, kiezen van een mammoet, een slagtand van een mammoet, een onderarmbeen van een wolharige neushoorn en verscheidene botjes, werden woensdag gevonden bij het Oranjekanaal tussen Wezuperbrug en Orvelte, meldt het gasinfrastructuurbedrijf vrijdag.
In 1991 werden op vijftien meter afstand van de locatie waar de resten zijn gevonden, ook al botten aangetroffen van een volwassen en een kleine mammoet. Daarom werd verwacht dat opnieuw resten zouden worden aangetroffen.
Mammoetexpert Anton Verhagen denkt dat de gevonden kiezen wel eens zouden kunnen horen bij de kaak die destijds werd gevonden. "In de kaak die we destijds vonden ontbraken namelijk twee kleinere kiezen en de twee gevonden kiezen lijken daar precies in te passen."
Van de in 1991 gevonden resten is vast komen te staan deze 41 duizend jaar oud zijn. Hoewel het vinden van botten van een mammoet of een neushoorn niet zeldzaam is, is deze vondst wel bijzonder, meldt Gasunie.
Volgens Verhagen worden de meeste botten in Nederland gevonden door vissers in de Noordzee of door baggeraars. "Hierdoor is nooit de exacte vindlocatie bekend. De botten zijn in hun context gevonden. De laag waarin de botten liggen kan meer informatie geven over de omgeving ten tijde van het leven van de dieren."
Op een van de botten zijn kras- en knaagsporen gevonden. Dat wil volgens Verhagen zeggen dat op die plek in Drenthe veertigduizend jaar geleden een neanderthaler heeft rondgelopen. "We zijn de grond uit het vak aan het zeven om te kijken of we vuurstenen terugvinden. Als we stenen werktuigen vinden, dan is het honderd procent zeker dat het een werktuig van neanderthalers is." De resten worden naar het cultuurhistorisch depot in Nuis gebracht.
(Bron: http://www.depers.nl/)
(Bron foto's: http://www.gasunie.nl/nl/gu/nieuws/mammoet-gevonden-mogelijke-jachtbuit-neanderthaler)
Walking With Beasts is an introduction to the animals (predominantly mammals) that roamed the earth from the extinction of the dinosaurs until the rise of early humans. The sequel to the BBC's acclaimed and highly successful series Walking With Dinosaurs, Beasts also uses a combination of clever special effects and computer-generated imagery to create a realistic world as it may have appeared millions of years ago. As to be expected from any BBC nature programme, the images are visually stunning; the prehistoric animals look impressively lifelike, interacting seamlessly with each other and their environment to create an entire world that could have been photographed only yesterday. Walking With Beasts has a host of little touches and flourishes that add to the feeling of realism (the animals knock over the cameras, pebbles hit the lens), which make this programme a success as a piece of pure entertainment and prehistoric escapism.
Olifant bij Borobudur tempel, Centraal Java (Indonesië) gooit twee kids van zich af - Boertje en zusje (9) met onbekende verwondingen naar ziekenhuis
Children Stepped On By Elephants At Indonesia's
Borobudur Temple
25-09-2009 Jakarta Globe, Indonesia
Two children were admitted to hospital in Yogyakarta after they were allegedly stomped on by an elephant at the Borobudur temple on Friday.
Rahma, 11, and her younger sister Ari, 9, were riding an elephant at the Borobudur Temple Amusement Park in Magelang, Central Java, at around 10 a.m. The children were riding one of the five elephants in the park.
A witness said that the incident happened when the elephant keeper gave the animals some water to drink. The elephants were pushing and fighting over the water and Rahma and Ari were thrown off the elephant’s back and were feared to have been stepped by one of the angry elephants.
The children were taken to two different hospitals. Rahma was taken to Muntilan General Hospital and Ari was taken to Panti Rapih Hospital.
Doctor Hawa Mustika from Panti Rapih Hospital told the Jakarta Globe that Ari was in a stable condition.
“We have x-rayed her and we found some blood in her left lung but generally, she’s fine,” Hawa said. The girl will need to stay in hospital for two to three days for observation before she is allowed to go home, he said.
There was no comment from the management of the amusement park about the incident.
(Bron: http://thejakartaglobe.com/)
Kat in Pascoag, Rhode Island (VS), vast in verboden val - Achterpootje kat geamputeerd
Cat caught in illegal steel trap in Burrillville,
loses leg
25-09-2009 Kate Bramson, Projo.com, Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts, The Providence Journal, USA
BURRILLVILLE, R.I. -- Animal control officers are investigating how a cat landed high up in a tree in the village of Pascoag, caught, severely injured, in a type of steel trap that has been banned in Rhode Island since 1977.
"It's a horrible, cruel device that inflicts intentional pain and suffering on the animals," Animal Control Officer Ronald Woods said Friday morning, describing the trap. "They're brutal. They're barbaric."
The cat has been treated since it was found a week ago and remains at the Northern Rhode Island Animal Hospital in North Smithfield, Woods said, where he is doing well after veterinarians tried to save his right rear leg, which had been caught in the trap. In the end, veterinarians needed to amputate the leg on Tuesday because the lack of blood flow
and nerve damage made it impossible to save the leg, according to Deputy Animal Control Officer Kerry L. Courtemanche.Trapper recovers from his wounds Investigators have been unable to determine if someone intentionally placed the cat in the trap and up in the tree or if someone had set the trap in the wooded area where it was found in an attempt to catch an animal such as a fisher or raccoon, according to Courtemanche.
Decades ago, people trapped fur-bearing animals like mink, weasels, beavers and foxes with these steel jaw leg-hold traps, Woods said. But legislation passed in 1977 to ban them because they were cruel and inhumane, Woods said.
A property owner contacted the town's Animal Control Office on the afternoon of Sept. 18, reporting that he had found a cat on his property, in a leg trap and hanging from a tree, according to Courtemanche, who was working that afternoon and responded to the area to help the animal.
Courtemanche called the Fire Department right away for assistance, Woods said. They had to cut the metal chain attached to the trap and help remove the trap from the cat's leg.
Animal Control Officers have named the short-haired black cat Trapper. They think he's about 2 years old, and they're still searching for his owner. He was in good physical condition except for his injury, Courtemanche said.
Woods said they don't know how long the animal had been trapped. He was definitely in shock, but they don't think he had been there long because he was not dehydrated.
They're accepting donations to cover the medical treatment for the cat, which will likely exceed $1,000, Woods said.
In addition, Woods said his office is asking anyone with this kind of trap to turn it in to the Animal Control Office.
"We'll take them -- no questions asked," he said. "They are illegal."
The Rhode Island Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is offering a $500 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible, according to the Burrillville Animal Control Office.
Woods said a team of animal control officers and veterinarians makes the decision together in a case like this whether the animal can be saved. With this cat, which they believe is not feral and was probably someone's pet, the decision was to save the animal, in part because of its remarkable disposition.
"It's definitely a save-able animal," Woods said. "And the cat is doing really well and already getting around after a couple days. The staff down there [at the animal hospital] is loving it. It's a lovable cat."
(Bron: http://newsblog.projo.com/)
(Bron foto: Projo.com)
Wetenschappers ontdekken 163 nieuwe diersoorten in in het Greater Mekong-gebied (Zuidoost Azië), waaronder vogel etende kikker en luipaardgekko
New Mekong species at risk from climate change:
WWF
25-09-2009 Agence France Presse
BANGKOK — Scientists discovered 163 new species in Southeast Asia's Greater Mekong region last year, but all are at risk of extinction due to climate change, the WWF said in a report released Friday.
The newly discovered creatures include a bird-eating frog with fangs, a bird that would rather walk than fly and a gecko whose alien appearance inspired the report's title of "Close Encounters", the conservation group said.
The report was released ahead of major UN talks on climate change in Bangkok next week, which are being held before a make-or-break summit in Copenhagen this December.
"Some species will be able to adapt to climate change, many will not, potentially resulting in massive extinctions," Stuart Chapman, director of the WWF Greater Mekong Programme, said in the report.
"Rare, endangered and endemic species like those newly discovered are especially vulnerable because climate change will further shrink their already restricted habitats," he said.
The new discoveries in 2008 include 100 plants, 28 fish, 18 reptiles, 14 amphibians, two mammals and a bird, the WWF report said. The area spans Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and China's Yunnan province.
Among the new species is the bird-eating fanged frog, which remained hidden in a protected area of Thailand despite the fact that scientists were studying there for 40 years, the report said.
The tiger-striped pitviper was discovered accidentally on an island off the coast of Vietnam when a scientist was looking for a lizard and his son pointed out that his hand was on a rock right next to the snake's fangs.
"We caught the snake and the gecko and they both proved to be new species," researcher Lee Grismer of La Sierra University in California was quoted as saying in the report.
The leopard gecko, found on another Vietnamese island, has the colouring of a leopard and bizarre orange, cat-like eyes and spindly limbs.
Meanwhile the nonggang babbler is a new bird species found in small flocks in China near the Vietnamese border, which only flies for short distances when frightened, the report said.
The Greater Mekong region has proved a fertile area for scientists. The WWF said in December 2008 that it had found 1,068 new species there between 1997 and 2007.
But the report said that the region's climate was already changing, with rising seas and saltwater intrusion having a particular impact.
The WWF stressed the importance of the penultimate negotiating session of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, starting in Bangkok on September 28, before the December Copenhagen meeting.
World leaders in Copenhagen are expected to agree new targets for global emissions beyond 2012, when the Kyoto Protocol expires.
"Protecting endangered species and vulnerable communities in the Greater Mekong and elsewhere around the world depends on fast progress at the UN talks in Bangkok," said Kathrin Gutmann, head of policy and advocacy at the WWF Global Climate Initiative.
(Bron & foto's: http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gqmfeHH6pAVAF2Cu1UVAr7Fbhscg)
Minister Klink buigt zich over dierproeven voor 'lifestyleziekten' en gebruik niet-menselijke primaten voor onderzoek invaliderende ziekten
SGP werpt extra vragen op bij dierproeven
25-09-2009 Agrarisch Dagblad
Minister Ab Klink (Volksgezondheid) buigt zich over de vraag in hoeverre dierproeven mogen dienen om medicijnen te vinden voor mensen die zwaar ziek zijn door hun levensstijl.
Ook laat hij kijken naar de verhouding tussen dierproeven en het uitsluiten van gezondheidsrisico's. Hij beloofde donderdag de kwesties mee te nemen in een trendanalyse waarmee hij al bezig is. De vragen werden geopperd door Bas van der Vlies (SGP). "Staat niet het vermijden van het allerkleinste risico centraal? Slaan we niet door?'' Van der Vlies heeft geen oordeel, maar vraagt zich af of een bepaalde onzekerheid door de mens niet geaccepteerd moet worden
Ook over de relatie tussen dierproeven en 'lifestyleziekten' sprak hij zich niet uit, maar hij wil 'op tijd doordenken'. Anders lopen we achter de nieuwe ethische kwesties aan, vreest Van der Vlies. Een 'genuanceerd'debat is nodig.
Een andere zaak die nader bezien moet worden is of bepaalde niet-menselijke primaten (apen) toch gebruikt mogen worden tegen niet direct levensbedreigende maar zeer invaliderende ziekten als Alzheimer en Parkinson.
Klink kondigde overigens aan dat de beloofde Brede Commissie Dierproeven nog dit jaar tot stand zal komen.
(Bron: http://www.agd.nl/)
In Assam (India) drie neushoorn stropers opgepakt - Mannen hadden neushoorn in Kaziranga National Park gedood
Three Rhino poachers held in Assam
25-09-2009 Times of India
GUWAHATI: Three poachers, who had allegedly been involved in killing a rhino and chopping off of its horn at the Burapahar forest range of Kaziranga five days back, were arrested in Nagaon district on Thursday.
The trio - two Paites from Manipur and a Guite from Karbi Anglong district's Manja area - were nabbed by foresters from Nagaon district's Salna area while they were looking for an exit route through the hilly Karbi terrain. They were later handed over to the police.
However, forest officials declined to divulge the poachers' names as they were trying to gather further information on their poaching network. Kaziranga divisional forest officer D D Gogoi said the poachers left the chopped-off horn behind, trying to dodge forest guards who had engaged in a fierce gunbattle with them on the day they killed the rhino.
"One of the poachers who was carrying the horn dropped it in a marshy water body at a place called Rhinoland park after forest officials opened fire. Following the disclosure by the poachers, we searched the area till late into the afternoon. Though we didn't find the horn yet, we will resume our search tomorrow morning," Gogoi said.
After killing the rhino, the poachers' gang had been ambushed by armed Kaziranga guards twice - once at the hilly Bagse Reserve Forest and then at Rhinoland park. Despite a volley of gunfire, the poachers had managed to escape then. But now, with their capture, cops are hoping to uncover the mastermind behind the numerous poaching bids made on the national park.
The poacher who was carrying the horn fell into the water body and dropped the horn as he tried to swim across. It was also confirmed that the three-member gang came with a single .303 rifle, which was also left behind in their hurry to flee.
The day the rhino had been gunned down, a tiger was found dead outside Kohra range of Kaziranga whereas, in nearby Dolamara forest range at Karbi Anglong, poachers had killed a jumbo and chopped off its tusks and trunk. The three animals represent the Big Five of Kaziranga, the only World Heritage Site in the state, about 250 km from here. The other members of the Big Five are wild buffalo and swamp deer.
Soon after the carcasses were found, a camp in-charge and two home guards were suspended on charges of dereliction of duty.
On the other hand, keeping in mind the frequent danger to animals in the national parks, the forest department has decided to give more teeth to forest rangers so they can better combat the poaching threat. It will be providing revolvers to the range offices of different national parks in Assam to improve their fire power.
Principal Chief Conservator of Forest Suresh Chand said the decision of providing 10 revolvers has been already taken and the range officers would be provided with the arms soon. Kaziranga will be given three revolvers at the moment.
Moreover, to add strength to the existing manpower in national parks, including Kaziranga, the forest department will raise an armed forest battalion of at least 600 personnel soon. The armed battalion will be trained at Bagmari near Kaziranga, which will also be headquarters of the battalion. "Interview of candidates for the battalion has already started, and soon, we will put them into service," Chand informed.
(Bron: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/)
Ierse dierenrechtenactivisten demonstreren tegen dierproeven bij twee beruchte proefdiercentra van Charles River Laboratories
Small group protest at Mayo’s two Charles River
facilities
25-09-2009 Mayo Advertiser, USA
A group of six protesters staged demonstrations at two Charles River Laboratories in Mayo this week. The members of the National Animal Rights Association staged the protest outside the gates of the laboratories in Carrentrila, Ballina, and in Glenamoy a short distance from the controversial Corrib Gas project.
Laura Broxson, spokesperson for NARA, spoke to the Mayo Advertiser at the protest in the Glenamoy facility about why they were there. “What we are doing today is taking part in a global week of action against vivisection breeders and vivisection testers,” she said. “Charles River is the global target at the minute so we picked the two facilities in Mayo to protest today to highlight the issue because not many people know that this is here and what goes on here. It is a commercial laboratory they will test anything for a price, it is mostly pharmaceutical and veterinary testing that goes on in there on cats, dogs, mice, rats, horses, you name it. We think it is immoral and wrong and shouldn’t be here in the first place.”
Broxson went on to criticise the location of the two plants which she said are hidden and out of the way. “We think that it’s done on purpose. If this was in a city centre there is no way local people would stand for it and accept it, where as if it’s in the middle of nowhere they can get away with anything.”
The earlier protest in Ballina passed off without incident, but Broxsen expressed her disappointment that no one from the company would engage with them in discussion. “We invited staff to come out and talk to us, but they wouldn’t. The only people that stood at the gates was their own security and then the gardaí came along. There was no interaction between staff and us. Overall our aim for the day is to raise awareness for the cause and to let the people in there [the laboratory] know that we know what they are doing. There may be only a few of us. The campaign has only started today and it can only get bigger, it’s more like a scouting protest day today and we are hoping that this will get the ball rolling and when we come again we hope to bring more and come as often as possible.”
When contacted by the Mayo Advertiser about the protest outside the company’s two plants in Mayo, Charles River issued the following statement: “The survival rates for major diseases are at an all-time high thanks to the discovery of new drugs. Charles River’s work is an essential component of the research that has led to these discoveries and has played a vital role in medical advances for humans as well as animals. Charles River has a deep commitment to animal welfare, and we make every effort to exceed national standards for the care of the animal models under our stewardship.”
(Bron: http://www.advertiser.ie/mayo)
donderdag 24 september 2009
Jody, a rescued chimp, from the biomedical research industry, nesting at Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum, Washington (USA)
Jody, a rescued chimpanzee living at Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, makes nests out of blankets and straw. Jody was used primarily for breeding during her years of use by the biomedical research industry.
Bizar: geit in Gweru (Zimbabwe) baart deels mensenbaby... - Waarschijnlijk gevolg van bestialiteit...
Gweru: Goat gives birth to human
24-09-2009 By A Correspondent for ZimEye.org, UK
THE provincial governor of Zimbabwe’s Midlands Province said “an adult human being was responsible” after a goat gave birth to a “human-like creature” on Sunday. Governor Jason Machaya led a delegation of police officers and journalists to the Maboleni area in Lower Gweru, under Chief Sogwala, to see the “creature” which died within hours.
“The head belongs to a man while the body is that of a goat,” Governor Machaya told the Chronicle newspaper.
Machaya said he believed a local man had “lost self control” and had sex with the goat.
“This incident is very shocking. It is my first time to see such an evil thing,” the governor said. “It is really embarrassing. It’s self-evident that an adult human being was responsible. Evil powers caused this person to lose self control.”
The Chronicle said “the creature had a human head, face, nose, shoulders and human-like skin that had very scanty furs. It had goat features from the ‘shoulders’ to the legs.”
Its “sagging stomach”, the paper said, “prevented curious villagers from determining whether it had human or animal sex organs as it protruded covering the front part.”
“Villagers said the end product was so scary that even dogs were afraid to move close to the goat,” the paper’s Midlands correspondent wrote after a trip to Maboleni with the governor.
A villager, Themba Moyo, said the “creature” was “a miracle that has never been witnessed anywhere”.
The goat’s owner, a Mr Nyoni, said he called the police and village elders after his shock find.
Nyoni has 15 goats and says the animal that gave birth to the bizarre creature “is the mother of most of my herd”.
“It’s the first time that my goat has done this. My goats often give birth to sets of twins,” he added.
Chief Sogwala has summoned villagers to a meeting, and fears the incident is a “bad omen”.
The chief advised Nyoni to seek the help of a sangoma “in search of answers to this bizarre incident”.
Govenor Machaya said it was a “disgrace that a man can stoop so low opting for animal company in a world full of women.”
He added: “We often hear cases of human beings who commit bestiality but this is the first time for such an act to produce a product with human features.”
The governor said he would lead a campaign for harsh sentences for people who abuse animals. (NewZimbabwe)
(Bron: http://www.zimeye.org/)
(Bron foto's: http://www.newzimbabwe.com/news-912-Exclusive%20Pictures%20The%20human%20goat/news.aspx)
Een tijger en cheetah blijken huisdier te zijn in Noord Ierland - Ook primaten, wolven, zebra's en emoes als huisdieren
Tiger and cheetah among NI 'pets'
24-09-2009 BBC News, UK
A tiger, a cheetah and venomous snakes are among a list of wild animals kept by private owners in Northern Ireland. The information was released to SDLP MLA Thomas Burns in response to a question he tabled in the Assembly.
The South Antrim MLA expressed his surprise at the "wide variety of dangerous wild animals" which are currently owned by local people.
Nineteen licences covering 60 creatures have been issued and are active. They do not include circus animals.
The licences have been issues for various primates, wolves, zebras, and emus.
Mr Burns said: "We recently heard of a wolf being sighted in the wild in Tyrone and last year we had reports of a lion wandering around north Belfast.
"Both these incidents proved to be misunderstandings, but in light of this new information it now seems these stories are at least plausible."
'Terrifying'
Mr Burns added that he imagines animals like emus, zebras and small primates "would enjoy a high quality of life" with a skilled keeper in the right environment.
However, he said he was concerned by the fact that big cats and deadly snakes were being kept by local owners.
"I obviously don't know the circumstances of each case, but when you look at things from a public safety point of view the thought of a venomous snake on the loose is pretty terrifying.
"At the same time I would also commend the owners for following the correct legal procedures by registering their animals and obtaining the proper licences" he said.
The legal requirement to register ownership of such animals was introduced almost three years ago.
(Bron: http://news.bbc.co.uk/)
Voshaai spoelt aan op strand van Hayle, Cornwall (Engeland)
Thresher shark is found on beach
24-09-2009 BBC News, UK
A 12ft shark of a breed rarely seen off the Cornish coast has been found washed up on a beach. The thresher shark was seen in the water by surfers at Hayle, on the north Cornwall coast, on Wednesday night and reported to the coastguard.
Ian Rayson, who spotted the shark
, said: "Its back tail kept coming out of the water. Its gills and things weren't moving so we knew it wasn't alive."Threshers can grow up to 20ft (6m) and are identified by their tail length.
Whip-like tail
The shark which was discovered had a 6ft (1.8m) long body, with a tail of the same length.
Dave Jarvis from Cornwall Wildlife Trust, who formally identified the shark, said: "It's in good condition physically, so we're going to take some photographs and some measurements and see if we can make some arrangements for post-mortem."
The Cornish Wildlife Marine Trust is hoping to find an agency to carry out the post-mortem examination.
The species is said to be harmless to humans although can cause some damage with its strong, whip-like tail.
(Bron: http://news.bbc.co.uk/)
(Bron foto: BBC News)
Bont is back! - Netwerk, donderdag 24-09-2009
De najaarscollectie hangt weer in de winkel, met dit seizoen opvallend veel bont. Maar met de terugkeer van bont in het modebeeld stijgt ook het aantal acties van dierenrechtenactivisten.
De activisten presenteren zich vreedzaam bij protesten tegenover het winkelend publiek. Maar Nederlandse ontwerpers die bont gebruiken in hun collecties en winkels die het verkopen krijgen regelmatig te maken met intimidatie, dreigementen en vernielingen.
In Netwerk een reportage over de risico's die het gebruik en de verkoop van bont met zich mee brengen.
Chemische industrie Nederland wil dat politiek sneller alternatieven voor dierproeven toelaat
Chemie pleit voor pragmatisch proefdierbeleid
24-09-2009 Vereniging van de Nederlandse Chemische Industrie, Uitgave: Nieuwsbrief 2009 week 39 > Categorie: VNCI Stoffenbeleid
De chemische industrie wil dat de politiek snel alternatieven voor dierproeven ontwikkelt, valideert en toelaat. Op die manier kan het gebruik van proefdieren drastisch teruggedrongen worden.
De VNCI heeft deze boodschap deze week overgebracht aan de Tweede Kamer. Deze vergadert 24 september over de nieuwe Europese richtlijn voor dierproeven. Deze richtlijn biedt ruimte voor de gewenste alternatieven.
De chemische industrie moet vanwege het REACH-project duizenden chemicaliën testen op hun effect op mens en omgeving. Dierproeven vormen hier een verplicht onderdeel van. De industrie en de regelgeving van REACH letten er niettemin op dat het gebruik van proefdieren zoveel mogelijk beperkt wordt. Zo zijn bedrijven verplicht om beschikbare informatie over stoffen met elkaar te delen. Als informatie over een stof ontbreekt, zijn bedrijven ook verplicht om deze gezamenlijk te genereren, zodat een stof maar één keer getest hoeft te worden.
Verder zijn er alternatieven voor dierproeven voorhanden, zoals de beoordeling aan de hand van modellen en in-vitro-weefseltesten. Overheid, industrie en wetenschap zijn daarnaast gezamenlijk druk bezig om alternatieve testmethodes te ontwikkelen.
De VNCI pleit in haar boodschap richting de Tweede Kamer niet alleen voor snelle acceptatie van deze alternatieven, maar wijst er ook op dat er in Nederland strengere regels voor dierproeven gelden dan op Europees niveau. Dit maakt het bedrijven in Nederland moeilijk om voor REACH internationaal samen te werken bij het testen van stoffen. Daarnaast kan ook het voorstel voor ethische beoordeling van dierproeven problemen opleveren.
De industrie onderschrijft het doel van dit voorstel, maar vreest dat de huidige formulering ertoe leidt dat sommige verplichte REACH-testen in Nederland niet uitgevoerd mogen worden. In plaats daarvan pleit de VNCI daarom voor een ethische toets die voor heel Europa geldt.
Gerelateerd: VNCI: 54 miljoen dierproeven voor REACH overdreven
(Bron: http://www.vnci.nl/)
Douane Keelung (Taiwan) onderschept 16 ivoor producten in bagage uit Nederland
KCO seizes 16 undeclared ivory products
24-09-2009 China Post, Taiwan
KEELUNG, Taiwan -- Keelung Customs Office (KCO) yesterday ferreted out 16 undeclared ivory products from an unaccompanied baggage shipped in from the Netherlands.
The KCO pointed out that the unregistered items from the Holland baggage included 16 ivory-made carvings, which are classified as protected wildlife products and should be declared and require a permit from Council of Agriculture.
Under the regulation of Wildlife Conservation Act, live animals and protected species cannot be imported or exported without permission by the government.
Anyone who violates the rules will be punished with six months' to 5 years' imprisonment with over NT$300,000 to 150,000 fine; also, all animal-made products will be confiscated, said the KCO.
(Bron: http://www.chinapost.com.tw/)
(Bron foto: China Post)
Groot Oostenrijks circus Louis Knie komt in december naast de Jaarbeurs Utrecht; grootste kerstcircus in Nederland
Circus Louis Knie komt naar Nederland
24-09-2009 door Richard van de Crommert, De Telegraaf
AMSTERDAM - Ondernemer Jeroen Hillenaar , groot geworden met reclamemasten langs snelwegen, haalt het internationale vermaarde circus Louis Knie naar Nederland. In december wordt naast de Jaarbeurs in Utrecht, twee weken lang, een tentencomplex opgezet van meer dan 30.000 vierkante meter, compleet met paarden- en koeienstallen.
Knie is een telg uit de wereldwijd bekende Zwitserse circusfamilie, waarmee ook Henk van der Meyden intensief samenwerkt. De Zwitserse familie hoort in Europa tot de top van de circuswereld. Hillenaar is een jaar geleden begonnen met de voorbereidingen en heeft er al enkele tonnen ingestoken. Tot nu toe heeft hij zijn plannen geheim gehouden.
De Zuid-Hollandse ondernemer zet direct hoog in. Maar liefst veertig artiesten zullen in de piste optreden. Er komen 29 shows die toegang bieden aan steeds 1700 mensen. Er zullen onder andere balkonloges in de tent komen. Het wordt in één klap het grootste kerstcircus in Nederland.
Voor deze speciale gelegenheid zal circusdirecteur Louis Knie zelf met zijn paarden in de piste staan. Volgende week wordt een mediacampagne gestart. Slechts om de zoveel jaar komt een groot internationaal circus naar Nederland. Het laatste grote circus dat Nederland bezocht was het Duitse Circus Krone. Dat zette zijn tenten in 2003 op in Amsterdam.
(Bron: http://www.telegraaf.nl/)
In Memoriam Gregoire, 1942 2008 the Jane Goodall Institute
One of the animal world's most incredible stories of resilience and happy endings came to a quiet close in December 2008: Gregoire, Africa's oldest-known chimpanzee and a national hero in the Republic of Congo, died in his sleep. Caretakers found Gregoire dead in his bed of eucalyptus leaves at the Tchimpounga Chimpanzee Rehabilitation Center, JGI's sanctuary for orphaned chimpanzees.
News of Gregoire's death brought messages of condolence and sympathy to Jane and JGI from around the world.Gregoire survived decades of solitary confinement and undernourishment in a Brazzaville zoo, but his life took a turn for the better when he met Jane Goodall. Thanks to her intervention, Gregoire's last years were peaceful and happy. Watch the video to learn more about this wonderful chimpanzee.
België start onderzoek naar op wegen omgekomen dieren - Gedode dieren op Vlaamse wegen worden in kaart gebracht
Aantal gedode dieren in verkeer in kaart gebracht
24-09-2009 Het Laatste Nieuws, Belgium
Het Departement Leefmilieu, Natuur en Energie van de Vlaamse overheid start samen met de milieuorganisaties Natuurpunt en Vogelbescherming Vlaanderen het project 'Dieren onder de wielen'. Daarmee willen ze in kaart brengen hoeveel dieren er op de Vlaamse wegen gedood worden, welke diersoorten verkeersgevoelig zijn en waar de belangrijkste knelpunten liggen.
Gegevens over dierlijke slachtoffers in het verkeer werden tot nu toe slechts fragmentarisch verzameld. Een onderzoek uit 1995 van Vogelbescherming Vlaanderen komt bij extrapolatie uit op "minstens 4 miljoen" grotere in het wild levende dieren per jaar. Voor vogels, zoogdieren en amfibieën is het wegverkeer nagenoeg de belangrijkste onnatuurlijke doodsoorzaak.
Het project wil voldoende informatie verzamelen om verkeersassen veiliger te maken, niet enkel voor de menselijke weggebruikers maar ook voor dieren die steeds vaker geconfronteerd worden met wegen die hun leefgebied doorsnijden.Wie een dood of gewond dier aantreft op het Vlaamse wegennet, kan dat melden op http://www.dierenonderdewielen.be/.
(Bron: http://www.hln.be)
Britse 90-jarige dierenrechtenactiviste nog steeds op de bres voor de dieren - 'The Bunny Hugging Terrorist': 'Direct action works'
Joan’s long march for animal rights
24-09-2009 Cambridge News, UK
Famous for her dramatic acts of protest, Cambridge’s Joan Court has chained herself to railings, locked herself in a cage and even gone on hunger strike – all in the name of animal rights. Now 90, she tells ALICE RYAN why she will always be an activist.
SITTING at her kitchen table, with a little grey cat beside her and a well-padded tabby at her feet, Joan Court is in a reflective frame of mind.
Famous in Cambridge for her dramatic acts of protest – from going on hunger strike to locking herself in a cage – she is a dedicated animal rights activist.
And, now 90, Joan is looking back over her life, her work, and her enduring love affair with animals.
“I’ve always had a special bond with cats,” she admits, stroking the small grey, who gives a purr and stretches out on the tabletop.
“Cats are so beautiful and so intelligent. I’ve got six at the moment, all rescued. Ideally I like to have seven, but I’ve just lost a Siamese...
“I want to record a cat’s purr and have it played when I die; I would be quite happy for that to be the last sound I hear on earth.”
Joan has just released the second volume of her autobiography: called The Bunny Hugging Terrorist, it charts the last three decades of her life – and her ongoing involvement with animal rights.
Published in paperback this summer, the book is prefaced by Labour’s Tony Benn; clearly a long-time admirer of Joan, he pays tribute to her “intelligence, passion and humour” and deems her “a shining example of grey power”.
“It is about my life,” says Joan. “But, more than anything, it is a tribute to the animal rights movement – which I believe to be the greatest social movement of this century.”
The book is a sequel to In the Shadow of Mahatma Gandhi, a memoir of the earlier part of Joan’s life.
Abused by her mother, a violent alcoholic, and abandoned by her father, who committed suicide when she was 12, she grew up determined to help other children in need.
First a pioneering nurse-midwife – a move which took her to India, where she encountered Gandhi – she then became a social worker, specialising in child protection.
Joan’s love of animals dates back to her early childhood. “It all started with Sam, the little cat who used to keep me company while I was waiting for my drunken mother to come home,” she recounts. “He was an enormous comfort to me when I was five and all alone in the silent flat.
“My mother was pretty awful but, even as a child, I had this incredible ability to find the good qualities in her – like the fact she loved animals too.
She used to go round the fields and put eau de cologne on donkeys’ ears to stop them being bothered by flies.” Having dedicated much of her career to child welfare as Joan approached retirement, she turned her attention to animal rights.
“People often ask me why,” she admits. “It really started when I found out about vivisection. Then I found out what was happening in the meat industry. And then I found out about live exports. Like a lot of people, I’d been going through life almost totally ignorant of what was happening to animals all around me.”
Joan actually came to Cambridge, aged 60, as a mature student of social anthropology. Shocked by the anti-vivisection posters and fliers she saw in the city, she joined local campaigners straight away – and went on her first demo the very next day.
A founder member of Animal Rights Cambridge, which is still going strong, Joan has devoted her time and energy to the cause ever since.
“One of my proudest achievements is helping to get fur out of Cambridge,” she says.
“One of our specialities was stink bombs: it’s amazing how quickly a shop empties when a group of respectable-looking ladies go in and then, on a signal, all stand on a stink bomb at the same time. It’s proof that direct action works.”
Campaigning against all forms of animal cruelty, Joan has been on endless marches and sit-ins, chained herself to several sets of railings (including those outside the Cambridge Senate House), locked herself in a cage, gone on three hunger strikes and been arrested four times.
“I was once arrested for holding a banner when I was told to put it down,” laughs Joan.
“And I was arrested for throwing a brick, which I actually hadn’t. It was a bit trying really. Prison cells are quite claustrophobic. And they’re very boring: I think they should paint them nicer colours.”
When Joan last went on a hunger strike – as part of a protest against animal testing – she went without sustenance for 72 hours. She was well into her 80s at the time. “By the end I was suffering from severe confusion; I didn’t recognise my best friend,” admits Joan.
“But I recovered very, very quickly. I always do.” One of Joan’s greatest adventures was, she says, her 2004 voyage on a Sea Shepherd patrol ship – as part of a crew tasked with fighting illegal fishing, whaling and the hunting of seals. At sea for weeks, she says it was “an amazing and wonderful experience”.
Joan’s activism is, she explains, fuelled by her first-hand experiences of seeing animals suffer. Several years ago, provoked by a TV documentary about pig farming, she visited a slaughterhouse.
“It was much worse than I thought it would be,” she recalls, shuddering. “A lot of the pigs weren’t properly electrocuted, so they were falling off their hooks and were clearly conscious when they were killed. And there was an enormous amount of blood, it was just pouring out of them.”
Another low was, continues Joan, watching sheep being loaded onto lorries, ready for live transportation overseas. “I think that’s one of the worst things I’ve ever seen,” she says.
“They were separated from their family and friends and loaded in so tightly they could hardly move. The whole place stank of ammonia. And I could see their faces, looking through the side of the trucks – and I couldn’t help them.”
A vegetarian from the age of 18, Joan became a vegan 10 years ago.
A believer in the sanctity of all life, she is also a Buddhist. Single, Joan lives in Cambridge with her adored cats.
And she has a close network of friends, many of them fellow animal rights campaigners, whom she describes as her “fictive family”; a chapter of The Bunny Hugging Terrorist (because “that’s what people call us, bunny huggers and terrorists”) is dedicated to them.
On acts of violence in the name of animal rights, Joan says: “I am opposed to violence towards people as well as animals.” She admits: “One of the annoying things about getting older is that you can’t be as adventurous as you want to be.
"But, if I’m proud of anything, I’m proud of the fact I’ve stayed with it: I’ve never given up campaigning for animals to be treated with respect, as beings with their own internal, emotional lives. And I never will.”
:: Joan’s memoir, The Bunny Hugging Terrorist, is out now in paperback. Published by Selene Press, it’s priced £9.99.
(Bron: http://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/)
(Bron foto: Cambridge News)
Grootste inbeslagname dieren ooit in de VS: 1045 verwaarsloosde dieren uit woning gehaald in Houston
SPCA seizes 1,045 animals from home
24-09-2009 By MIKE GLENN, HOUSTON CHRONICLE, USA
When SPCA investigators received an anonymous tip Wednesday afternoon about animals in need of medical care at a home in northwest Houston, they had no idea it would turn into one of the largest U.S. animal seizures in memory.
"At that time, we didn't know how many animals were on the property," said Charles Jantzen, chief investigator for the Houston Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.
It took agency workers about three hours to remove 1,045 animals — most crammed into tight cages — from the home in the 6500 block of Breen.
"They were in deplorable conditions throughout the entire property," Jantzen said. "Very few of the animals had the basic staples of life — food, water and shelter."
The majority that were confiscated were birds, including a score of chickens, roosters, ducks and parrots. SPCA workers also seized gerbils, snakes, iguanas, among other animals.
"There was a goat there that was skin-and-bones walking around the property," agency spokeswoman Meera Nandlal said.
A pair of small dogs were also found in cages stacked amid piles of trash scattered around the home, officials said.
The animal cages were scattered throughout the home and around the property — located on an isolated stretch of road in a mainly light-industrial area.
"We were surprised that there were over 1,000 animals on that small piece of property," Jantzen said.
Investigators said most of the animals had no water to drink.
The homeowners told authorities they sell the animals at flea markets throughout the area.
The very enormity of the animal-selling operation stunned SPCA workers at the scene.
"That's where we just have to focus on the job at hand — our evidence-collecting and ultimately removing those animals," Jantzen said.
Authorities said the homeowners were cooperative during the investigation.
"They (the animals) were not hidden — they were not secretive," Jantzen said.
The animals were taken to the SPCA's Houston headquarters for a medical examination.
The next step is a court date to decide the final disposition of the animals, officials said.
The results from the investigation will be referred to the Harris County District Attorney's Office for any possible charges, officials said.
mike.glenn@chron.com
(Bron: http://www.chron.com/)
Laat proefdieronderzoekers Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (België) weten dat u tegen experimenten op apen bent
Emailalert: Wij eisen gerechtigheid!
Stop de apentesten in Leuven
24-09-2009 St. Anti Dierproeven Coalitie
De Anti Dierproeven Coalitie is een dierenrechtenorganisatie die tweewekelijks massaal oproept om protestmails te sturen naar bedrijven en instellingen die schuldig zijn aan dierenleed. Het enige dat jij dan nog hoeft te doen, is de tekst copiëren in een bericht en doorsturen naar onderstaande mailadressen.
Deze protestmails bewijzen elke keer weer hun effectiviteit, maar moeten wel massaal gestuurd worden om impact te hebben! Dus als je echt geeft om dieren, help hen dan door je vandaag nog in te schrijven en zeker de protestmails te sturen.
Emails:
mark.waer@rec.kuleuven.be,
Peter.Janssen@med.kuleuven.be,
rik.vandenberghe@uz.kuleuven.ac.be,
patrick.dupont@med.kuleuven.be,
philip.joris@med.kuleuven.be,
Guy.Orban@med.kuleuven.be,
Rufin.Vogels@med.kuleuven.be,
Marc.VanHulle@med.kuleuven.be,
Wim.Vanduffel@med.kuleuven.be,
veerle.baekelandt@med.kuleuven.be,
Joep.Konings@econ.kuleuven.be,
Inge.Clerens@rec.kuleuven.be,
Othmar.Vanachter@law.kuleuven.be,
Gerard.Govers@ees.kuleuven.be,
Koenraad.Debackere@abh.kuleuven.be,
Paul.DeBoeck@rec.kuleuven.be,
Ludo.Melis@rec.kuleuven.be,
Marijke.Ryngaert@rec.kuleuven.be,
Johan.Hoornaert@rec.kuleuven.be,
Herman.Buelens@duo.kuleuven.be,
Karen.Maex@rec.kuleuven.be,
Wim.Robberecht@med.kuleuven.be,
Koen.Demyttenaere@med.kuleuven.be,
Werner.Spileers@uz.kuleuven.ac.be,
Mark.Jorissen@uz.kuleuven.ac.be,
Jozef.Peuskens@med.kuleuven.be,
Filip.Abraham@rec.kuleuven.be,
Karen.Maex@rec.kuleuven.be,
Piet.VandenAbeele@kuleuven-kortrijk.be,
Voorbeeldbrief:
Geachte,
Op dit moment zitten er tientallen aapjes opgesloten in jullie laboratorium voor Neuro- en Psychofysiologie, campus Gasthuisberg.
Via de media vernam ik welke gruwelijke experimenten de K.U.Leuven uitvoert op deze onschuldige dieren. Dit vervult mij met weerzin!
Gelijkaardige onderzoeken lopen al vele jaren in uw universiteit, maar ook in andere buitenlandse laboratoria. Dat er na jaren van intensief en pijnlijk neurologisch onderzoek nog steeds relatief weinig resultaten zijn voortgekomen uit deze experimenten, zou een
teken aan de wand moeten zijn voor deze zogenaamde wetenschappers.
Ik sluit mij dan ook volledig aan bij de juridische procedure die de Anti Dierproeven Coalitie heeft opgestart tegen deze onethische en onwetenschappelijke praktijken.
Hoogachtend,
(JE NAAM)
(Bron: http://www.stopdierproeven.org/)
(Bron foto: St. Anti Dierproeven Coalitie)
Hoop voor twee van 's werelds meest bedreigde primaten: speciale veilige gebieden in China en Vietnam
Fresh hope for endangered primates
New Asian reserves could save species with just 300 individuals in the wild
24-09-2009 By Michael McCarthy, Environment Editor, The Independent, UK
Two of the world's rarest primates, the cao vit gibbon and the Tonkin snub-nosed monkey, now have a more secure future after the creation of safe havens for them in China and Vietnam.
Once thought extinct, both species are now on the critically endangered list, with just 110 cao vit gibbons and about 200 Tonkin snub nosed monkeys left in the world, and it is hoped the new forest reserves will increase their chances of survival.
The British wildlife charity Fauna and Flora International (FFI), which works for wildlife protection in developing countries, was instrumental in setting up the new protected areas, which house the gibbon's only known population, and the most viable population of the monkey.
The new gibbon sanctuary, the 6,500-hectare Bangliang Nature Reserve in China's Guangxi Province, is directly adjacent to Vietnam's Cao Vit Gibbon Conservation Area, which FFI helped to establish in 2007. The Bangliang reserve more than quadruples the amount of protected forest for the gibbon, and the two protected areas together contain the world's last examples of the species.
"This increase in the amount of protected cao vit gibbon habitat is a huge success for FFI and for conservation in the region," said Luo Yang, FFI's China programme manager. "FFI has been encouraging the local government to establish this new reserve ever since the species was discovered in China in 2006. The cao vit gibbon currently lives mainly on the Vietnamese side of the border but it now has the chance to extend its population into China. The future for the species now looks much brighter."
The other protected area, in Khau Ca forest, in Ha Giang Province, northern Vietnam, contains 90 Tonkin snub-nosed monkeys. The new 2,000-hectare reserve also supports a relatively pristine sub-tropical forest with a wide range of other wildlife like macaques, lorises, small carnivores and rare plant species.
"This new reserve protects the most viable Tonkin snub-nosed monkey population and so represents the species' best chance for survival," said Paul Insua-Cao, the charity's Vietnam primate programme manager. "FFI is proud to have helped to establish the protected area and congratulates the provincial government and local communities on their new reserve."
The Tonkin snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus avunculus) is endemic to north-western Vietnam and was thought to be extinct until the 1990s. The cao vit gibbon (Nomascus nasutus) was also thought to be extinct until rediscovered by an FFI team in 2002. The main threat to both species is habitat loss.
(Bron: http://www.independent.co.uk/)
woensdag 23 september 2009
Wilde honden richten in Aboriginal gebieden rond Alice Springs (Australië) dood en verderf aan onder mannen, vrouwen en kinderen - Twee mannen gedood
Killer dogs on rampage near Alice Springs
24-09-2009 By Greg Ansley, The New Zealand Herald, New Zealand
CANBERRA - Packs of wild dogs rampaging through Aboriginal town camps on the fringes of Alice Springs have killed and mauled men, women and children.
The maulings - two of which are the subject of an inquest that opened this week - follow earlier attacks in remote, drought-stricken areas of Australia and follow warnings that wild dogs are becoming larger and more vicious.
Research is showing that their prey is switching from smaller game to large animals such as cattle - and now humans.
Many are hybrids of dingoes and domestic dogs gone feral, producing crossbreeds up to 20 per cent heavier than previous average weights, and of such a threat that a national strategy was launched this year to control them.
In Hidden Valley, one of the squalid town camps that have now been embraced in a A$125 million ($145 million) federal plan to haul similar communities out of poverty, dogs have become a lethal threat.
In Alice Springs, Coroner Greg Cavanagh has been told the gruesome details of the deaths of two men within three weeks at Hidden Valley, both partially eaten by packs that live in the surrounding countryside.
South Australian disability pensioner Michael Hardy, 27, died first, after stopping at Hidden Valley on his way back to Adelaide after visiting a brother in Darwin.
His body, described at the time as a "bloody mess", was found near the entrance to the camp in July last year.
Counsel assisting the coroner, Jodi Truman, told the inquest Hardy had apparently been drunk when attacked, and had fallen backwards, striking his head.
"Thereafter, Mr Hardy sustained wounds and injuries as a result of the dog attack to his neck, which were severe and were in keeping with a dog attacking Mr Hardy's throat with sufficient force to cause respiratory obstruction and asphyxial death," she said.
Detective Sergeant Leith Phillips described the scene as gruesome: "I've never seen anything like it."
Three weeks later James Roman, 48, suffered an apparent heart attack at Hidden Valley. His body was mauled by dogs.
Hardy and Roman were not the first victims. Ranger Clem Wheatley said he had told the Alice Springs Town Council and Tangentyere Council, the indigenous body controlling the town camps, of the dog problem since 2001. A year later he had warned that if immediate action was not taken people would die.
Since then there have been two deaths - other than Hardy and Roman - and a number of serious attacks.
In 2005 the body of a woman killed by dogs was found in a pool of blood at another camp known as Trucking Yard, and dogs had partially eaten the body of a man who had drowned in his own vomit after falling unconscious.
Last year a woman was attacked after she fell over, losing an ear and part of her face. In other cases a man's scrotum was seriously damaged, and a seven-year-old boy was dragged from his bicycle at the Tangentyere camp and bitten deeply on the arms, legs, shoulders and back.
Last year officials began cracking down in the camps, where homes had as many as seven or eight dogs, culling animals, restricting numbers to two per household, and forcing registration in a drive to control the threat.
But Truman told the inquest that it was possible that such sweeps faded after the immediate threat lessened.
Coroner Cavanagh, who will determine if any failure by the councils had contributed to the deaths of Hardy and Roman, said: "It's unacceptable that in the 21st century in an Australian town ... packs of dogs roam the streets, biting, mauling and eating parts of citizens."
(Bron: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/)
(Bron foto: New Zealand Herald)
Amerikaanse primaten bevrijdingsweek 2009 - Acties 17-24 oktober tegen primaten proefdierlaboratoria in VS
National Primate Liberation Week 2009
23-09-2009 Stop Animal Exploitation Now!!, USA
Over 70,000 primates (rhesus monkeys, baboons, squirrel monkeys, chimpanzees, etc.) are experimented on every year in the United States. Many thousands of primates are also imprisoned in labs for breeding and conditioning. This brings the total number of primates held captive in laboratories to almost 120,000.
Many primates are caged in facilities owned by the federal government. Over 7500 are imprisoned within the laboratories of the National Institutes of Health. The Department of Defense incarcerates over 1600. Other federal agencies also use primates in experimentation including NASA, USDA, FDA, and the CDC. And animal dealers who sell primates to labs lock away 7000 - 10000. Over 20,000 primates are imported to the U.S. for experimentation every year.
Many of these primates experience horrible conditions. Recent government documentation has revealed primates dying of dehydration, wasting diseases, hepatitis, encephalitis, and many other severe illnesses.
The experiments to which these intelligent animals are subjected are extremely cruel. Many primates are confined to restraint chairs for many hours. Others suffer through the throes of withdrawal from addictive drugs. Devices are often literally bolted to the skulls of primates using steel screws. Infants are ripped away from their mothers and driven insane. This list of cruelties only scratches the surface.
These intelligent social animals often suffer terribly from isolation. Approximately 35% of the animals housed in labs undergo some level of social isolation. Solitary housing has been shown to cause psychologically aberrant behavior in primates within laboratories. In fact, as many as 10% of isolated primates engage in self-injurious behavior, biting and tearing at their own flesh though recent information indicates that these numbers may be very low.
Duplication within the system is rampant, with some experiments being funded dozens of times simultaneously, wasting tens of millions in federal funding.
Though we often speak about tens of thousands of animals, we must remember that we are really speaking about individuals. These are intelligent animals with needs, desires, and intelligence. However, our laboratories treat them as though they were little more than furry test tubes. Please read about the lives of individual animals on our website. Life in a Box describes the existence of rhesus monkeys at the University of Michigan. The Pain of Animal Experimentation discusses life for primates inside the laboratories of the University of Minnesota. They Are Only Numbers reveals the violence that primates experience within the laboratories of the University of California, Davis. Glimpses provides an insight into the everyday existence of primates within the New Iberia lab in Louisiana.
It is crucial that all of us work together to educate the public about the horrors of primate experimentation. There are several important steps to be taken to prepare for events in your area.
First, look at the materials on our website (http://www.saenonline.org/) which will be useful for educating both activists and the public. We have prepared fact sheets and in-depth reports about primate experimentation.
Please go to the National Primate Liberation Week home page to get access to SAEN materials.Second, pick a target for your event. Primate laboratories are located within many major cities across the U.S. including:
Birmingham (AL), Little Rock (AR), Phoenix (AZ), Tucson (AZ), San Francisco (CA), Los Angeles (CA), San Diego (CA), Davis (CA), Denver (CO), New Haven (CT), Washington, D.C. Gainesville (FL), Atlanta (GA), Chicago (IL), New Orleans (LA), Lafayette (LA), Boston (MA), Wilmington (MA), Baltimore (MD), Ann Arbor (MI), Minneapolis (MN), St. Louis (MO), Jackson (MS),
Durham (NC), Winston-Salem (NC), Hanover (NH), Princeton (NJ), Piscataway (NJ), Alamogordo (NM), Sparks (NV), New York (NY), Rochester (NY), Syracuse (NY), Columbus (OH), Portland (OR), Pittsburgh (PA), Philadelphia (PA), Providence (RI), San Antonio (TX), Houston (TX), Austin (TX), Nashville (TN), Richmond (VA), Seattle (WA), Everett (WA), Madison (WI).
It is possible to locate primate laboratories by using the Facility Reports and Information section of our website.
Pick the style of event you would like to organize. Protests, vigils, news conferences, informational tabling, leafleting, etc. are all worthwhile events. The type of event that you choose is limited only by your own imagination. Utilize the informational resources on the SAEN website to help in your planning.
Now go to our website and fill in the participation form so that we can support your efforts . We will provide you with information, press releases, and other technical support that will make your events more effective.
Remember one thing: the primates who are suffering in laboratories as you read this letter are depending on us to work together to fight for their freedom. We must exercise our rights (free speech, freedom of assembly, etc.) so that we can fight for the recognition of their rights. They have no voice but ours. They have no protection, no hope, unless you act. For every activist that does nothing, more primates suffer and die.
The decision is yours. You have the choice to do nothing, but your decision has consequences for the primates. Your inaction condemns primates to suffering and death. Your hard work can bring their freedom closer.
Where will you be October 17th – October 24th ?
With Respect for All Life,
Michael A. Budkie,
A.H.T.,
Executive Director, SAEN (Stop Animal Exploitation NOW!)
(Bron: http://www.all-creatures.org/saen/event-nplw-announce.html)
(Bron foto's: SAEN)
Kat in Philadelphia (VS) volledig ingetaped - Dierenarts kan alle tape verwijderen
Duct-taped cat recovering after sticky prank
23-09-2009 Kare11, USA
Duct tape can be used for a lot of things: patching holes, hanging posters, even making wallets. Still, one thing you should never use it for is making a suit for your cat.
A tan and black striped kitty was found sporting her second coat in a Philadelphia yard Tuesday.
A woman quickly called in the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to rescue the feline after spotting it along the 2200 block of Edgley Street, officials said.
They believe the cat was dumped there.
Vets were able to remove the tape without harming the cat and she is expected to be fine.
The Pennsylvania SPCA is offering a $1,000 reward for information leading to a conviction in the case.
(Bron: http://www.kare11.com/)
Bengaalse tijger in Noah's Ark Zoo Farm in Wraxall (Engeland) verlaat na paar dagen hoog 'verblijf' wegens honger
Hunger forces tiger to climb down
23-09-2009 BBC News, UK
A Bengal tiger which became stuck at the top of an activity tower at a North Somerset zoo has climbed down for food. Two-year-old Tanvir climbed to the top of the 15ft (5m) structure at Noah's Ark Zoo Farm in Wraxall on Monday, but was too frightened to come down.
The farm said the tiger had braved the journey down by about 2100 BST on Tuesday.
After descending the tower, Tanvir ate a pig's head and is said to be none the worse for his experience.
Christina Bush, co-owner of the zoo farm, said: "He must have been very hungry so he came down when he was ready.
"I think he enjoyed the view from the tower."
Tanvir has been with the zoo since the summer.
(Bron: http://news.bbc.co.uk/)
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (België) steunt haar onderzoekers die apen als proefdieren gebruiken - Volgens de ADC zijn er voldoende alternatieven
K.U.Leuven verantwoordt experimenten met apen
23-09-2009 Nieuws.be, Belgium
De K.U.Leuven steunt haar neurofysiologische onderzoekers die apen als proefdieren gebruiken bij experimenten. De Anti Dierproeven Coalitie (ADC) diende maandag na herhaaldelijke protestacties klacht in bij het Leuvens gerecht. Volgens het ADC bestaan er alternatieven voor het gebruik van de apen en verlopen de experimenten "wreedaardig".
"De apen worden gebruikt bij onderzoek van de hersenen, voor een aantal waarnemingsvermogens of waarnemingen staan ze zeer dicht bij de mens", legt vicerector biomedische wetenschappen Minne Casteels uit.
"Bedoeling is na te gaan welke zones in de hersenen verantwoordelijk zijn voor het waarnemen en uitvoeren van taken en welke bij ziektes worden aangetast. Dat moet leiden tot een betere diagnose en behandeling van aandoeningen zoals de ziekte van Parkinson, hersenbloeding of trauma's in bepaalde hersenzones. Het gebruik van apen is noodzakelijk om in dit domein vooruitgang te boeken."
Casteels benadrukt dat elk experiment met dieren vooraf moet voorgelegd worden aan een ethische commissie. Die gaat na of de proef niet kan uitgevoerd worden zonder of met minder proefdieren of met minder lijden.
(Bron: http://www.nieuws.be/)
Drie zeldzame brillangoeren voor Burgers' Zoo Arnhem - Dieren komen uit Israelisch apenpark
Zeldzame apen komen naar Burgers' Zoo
23-09-2009 De Gelderlander
ARNHEM - Dierentuin Burgers' Zoo in Arnhem breidt zijn groep apen uit met drie brillangoeren. De apen zijn zeldzaam in dierentuinen, in geen ander Nederlands park wonen de bijzondere apen. Dat meldde een woordvoerder van Burgers' Zoo woensdag.
De Zuidoost-Aziatische apen hebben witte ringen rondom hun ogen, waardoor het lijkt alsof ze een bril dragen. Ze zijn door hun speciale dieet van meestal giftige bladeren lastig in een dierentuin te houden.
De twee vrouwtjes en een mannetje komen uit een Israëlisch apenpark en worden donderdag in Arnhem verwacht.
(Bron: http://www.gelderlander.nl/)
(Bron foto: Gelderlander)
Chirurgen in dierenkliniek Boston (VS) verwijderen 21 pond wegende tumor uit labrador retriever - Tumor is 1/6 gewicht hond
Surgeons Remove 21-Pound Tumor From Dog
Tumor Had Grown To One-Sixth Dog's Weight
23-09-2009 The Boston Channel, USA
BOSTON -- Surgeons at Boston's Angell Animal Medical Center removed a 21-pound tumor from a Labrador retriever, the largest tumor veterinarians there had ever seen.
Warren, 13, fully recovered from the surgery last spring to remove the tumor that had grown to one-sixth his body weight.
Warren was to be reunited with the surgeons at the hospital Wednesday afternoon.
“Warren had the largest external tumor that I have personally seen in my 35 years as a veterinary surgeon,” said Dr. Michael Pavletic, Director of Surgical Services.
The tumor had grown so large it made walking difficult for the dog and his breathing became increasingly labored.
"While the tumor required surgery, there were many life-threatening factors to consider as well including Warren’s age," said Pavletic.
Surgeons faced the problem of dealing with the cavity that was created once the mass was removed.
"Although Warren’s tumor has the possibility of recurring, it appears to be a slow-growing tumor that we can monitor and help manage in the months ahead,” said Dr. Jean Duddy of Angell’s Internal Medicine Service
"Warren has since spent the past five months enjoying his lightened frame following the lifesaving surgery," Duddy said.
(Bron: http://www.thebostonchannel.com/)
(Bron foto's: Boston Channel)
Last performance for lions of Bolivia
Six lions and their baboon friend embark on an incredible journey after a new law in Bolivia renders their performances illegal. Follow us on twitter at http://twitter.com/itn_news.
Organizations Join Forces to Protect Tiny Bog Turtle in Maryland (USA)
In Maryland, environmental officials are working to save one of the smallest and rarest turtles in North America. The bog turtle had the power to move an entire highway project in the state of Maryland. The tiny turtle is listed as an endangered species. It faces a disappearing habitat as well as poachers. Producer Zulima Palacio has the story. Carol Pearson narrates.
Ook in hoger beroep dwangsom voor omstreden stichting Dierenthuis Aarle-Rixtel - Dierenthuis gaat verhuizen naar Almere
Dierenthuis krijgt ook in hoger beroep dwangsom
23-09-2009 Omroep Brabant
AARLE-RIXTEL - Stichting Dierenthuis in Aarle-Rixtel mag geen dieren meer houden aan de Bakelseweg en heeft dus terecht een dwangsom opgelegd gekregen. Dat is de uitspraak in het hoger beroep dat de stichting tegen de gemeente had aangespannen.
Het Dierenthuis vangt moeilijk te plaatsen, gewonde en bejaarde katten en honden op. Eind 2007 legde de gemeente Laarbeek een dwangsom van 75.000 euro aan de stichting op omdat het bestemmingsplan een dierenopvang op de Bakelseweg niet toelaat.
De rechter erkent dit en bevestigt daarmee een eerdere uitspraak van de rechtbank in Den Bosch. Of de gemeente de dwangsom echt gaat innen, is nog niet besloten. Het Dierenthuis zal binnenkort verhuizen naar Almere. In oktober wordt duidelijk wanneer dat gaat gebeuren en op welke plek.
Geschiedenis
Het Dierenthuis verhuisde in oktober 2007 vanwege ruimtegebrek van Wilbertoord naar Aarle-Rixtel, een ruime plek midden in de bossen. Al snel kwamen er bezwaren van omwonenden tegen de opvang.
De kwestie rondom de dwangsom riep veel emoties op. Niet alleen bij vrijwilligers van het Dierenthuis en de tweeduizend donateurs, maar overal in het land. Een online petitie leverde bijna 13.000 protesthandtekeningen op.
(Bron: http://www.omroepbrabant.nl/)
(Bron foto: Omroep Brabant)
Ook dit jaar weer levende dieren, waaronder kameel, in Kerststal gemeentehuis Den Haag - Protesten blijken zinloos.....
Kameel blijft in Haagse Kerststal
23-09-2009 RTV West
DEN HAAG - Ondanks de protesten blijft de levende kerststal in het Haagse stadhuis zoals hij is, dus met dieren. Dit schrijven burgemeester en wethouders van Den Haag aan de gemeenteraad.
De SP, Groenlinks en de Haagse Stadspartij hadden in een initiatiefvoorstel aangedrongen op een opzet van de kerststal zonder beesten. De partijen vinden het niet goed om dieren als amusement te gebruiken.
Volgens het college hebben verschillende externe deskundigen gekeken naar het welzijn van de dieren in de kerststal. Zij hebben geconcludeerd dat daar niets mis mee is.
(Bron: http://www.westonline.nl/)
(Bron foto: RTV West)
Twee herdershonden in Middelburg in beslag genomen - Honden bijten op Parelplein lapjeskat dood
Bijtende honden in beslag genomen
23-09-2009 Provinciale Zeeuwse Courant
MIDDELBURG - De politie heeft dinsdagavond in de omgeving van het Parelplein in Middelburg twee herdershonden in beslag genomen.
De honden waren, voor de tweede keer sinds korte tijd, ontsnapt van een terrein aan de Elektraweg en hadden op het Parelplein een lapjeskat doodgebeten.
De politie is op zoek naar de eigenaar van de lapjeskat die een roze halsband, met daaraan een 'diamanten' hartje, om had. Deze wordt verzocht te bellen naar 0900-8844.
Blijkbaar is er ook een man gebeten en de politie verzoekt deze man zich te melden, ook op hetzelfde telefoonnummer.
De honden zijn door de dierenambulance naar het asiel gebracht, waar ze voorlopig moeten blijven.
(Bron: http://www.pzc.nl/)
Italiaanse maffia in Caserta gebruikt krokodil om ondernemers te intimideren - Krokodil leeft op een balkon....
Caserta -Antonio Cristofaro intimidiva gli imprenditori con la suo "originale" animale da compagnia
Chiedeva il pizzo armato di coccodrillo
23-09-2009 Corriere2000, Italy
Un’arma del tutto originale. Un coccodrillo vivo e vegeto per intimidire chi non voleva pagare il pizzo. Per convincere gli imprenditori, il malvivente mostrava loro un coccodrillo che girovagava sul terrazzo di casa, all’ultimo piano di un normale condominio di Orta di Atella, nel Casertano.
L’obiettivo era quello di trovare armi a casa di un uomo ritenuto dagli inquirenti boss emergente e già noto alla giustizia per porto abusivo e detenzione d’armi, tra l’altro.
Ed invece, dal personale della Dia, insieme agli agenti del commissariato di polizia di Frattamaggiore e della squadra mobile di Caserta è stato trovato, oltre ad un accurato impianto di videosorveglianza, anche un coccodrillo.
Secondo quanto accertato dagli inquirenti, il rettile che veniva alimentato con topi e conigli era utilizzato da Cristofaro per intimorire le vittime, soprattutto imprenditori.
Ritrovato nell’abitazione anche un giubbotto antiproiettile solitamente indossato da Cristofaro, nipote di un boss ucciso un anno e mezzo fa, a Cesa, Caserta, nella faida tra i clan Caterino e Mazzara. Per l’uomo è scattata una denuncia per possesso illegale di animali.
(Bron: http://www.corriere2000.it/)
(Bron foto: http://www.pressweb.it/09/23/nuova-arma-della-camorra-un-coccodrillo.htm)
1702 Exotische dieren aangetroffen in auto op snelweg A16 in Italië - Handelaar onderweg van Napels naar Puglia
Napoli, auto carica di animali esotici
23-09-2009 TGCom, Italy
Sequestrati, dalla Guardia di Finanza 1.702 animali esotici: camaleonti, tartarughe marine, scoiattoli giapponesi, stipati all'inverosimile in una Fiat Multipla bloccata mentre era in transito lungo l'autostrada A16.
Denunciato l'uomo che era alla guida dell'automobile e che è titolare di un negozio di animali esotici, a Bari. Secondo quanto riferito dall'uomo alla Guardia di Finanza, gli animali erano stati acquistati nel Napoletano ed erano diretti all'esercizio commerciale pugliese.
Al dettaglio, la vendita di animali avrebbe comportato un guadagno di circa 20mila euro.
(Bron: http://www.tgcom.mediaset.it/)
(Bron foto's: TGCom)
Acht kalfjes en koeien bij schuurbrand Ophemert gedood - Brandweer redt 112 koeien uit brandende schuur
Koeien en kalveren dood door brand
23-09-2009 Agrarisch Dagblad
Brand in een schuur in Ophemert heeft dinsdagavond het leven gekost aan acht koeien en kalfjes. De brandweer kon voorkomen dat 112 andere runderen ook ten prooi vielen aan de vlammen. Dat heeft een woordvoerder van de brandweer gezegd.
De schuur maakt deel uit van een complex van meerdere gebouwen die aan elkaar vaststaan achter een boerderij in de Gelderse plaats. In de stal verbleven in totaal 35 dieren. Ook stonden er landbouwmachines en lag er hooi en stro opgeslagen. In de aangrenzende schuur stonden nog eens 85 koeien en kalfjes. De brandweer kon voorkomen dat het vuur doorzette.
Door de brand zijn geen mensen gewond geraakt, ook is er geen asbest vrijgekomen.
(Bron: http://www.agd.nl/)
Fraser Island Dingo Preservation Group (Fraser Island, Australië): 'Dingo hekwerken en roosters zijn een farce'
Fraser Is dingo fences 'an absolute joke'
23-09-2009 By Katherine Spackman, ABC News, Australia
The Fraser Island Dingo Preservation Group (FIDPG) says the State Government is wasting money on dingo fences on the south-east Queensland island.This week, the State Government will begin constructing another dingo fence on the island at the Eurong Waste Transfer Station and says it will not have an electrified dingo grid because it will be gated.
The FIDPG says the State Government's decision not to build a dingo grid in the new dingo fence suggests they are not working.
FIDPG chairwoman Bree Jashin says dingo fences have been a bad policy decision. "I think the dingo fences will go down in history as an absolute joke - [an] ineffective and inefficient way to manage a wild animal and like the Berlin Wall - sooner or later they will come down," she said.
Ms Jashin says dingoes just walk over the grids.
"The grids are an absolute maintenance nightmare," she said.
"They rarely work and they fill up with sand on a regular basis very quickly.
"I guess what they're considering is a gate that you open and close as you enter and exit the grounds. "
She also says workers had no regard for the local habitat when building the last two fences.
"Over at Kingfisher on the beachfront ... they actually took the time to do the fence by hand and they wove the fence in and out of trees," she said.
"In Eurong and Happy Valley they didn't seem to care about anything, they just bulldozed everything.
"So we're all wondering exactly how sensitively and intelligently they're actually going to install this construction."
(Bron: http://www.abc.net.au/)
(Bron foto's: ABC News)
Twaalf mannen in Chitwan National Park (Nepal) gearresteerd verdacht van het doden van neushoorns
Dozen arrested in connection with rhino poaching
23-09-2009 Nepal News, Nepal
Chitwan National Park (CNP) has arrested a dozen persons with arms in a span of two weeks in connection with recent incidents of rhino killings from various places in Chitwan, Makwanpur and Nawalparasi, Kantipur daily reported.
The arrested are kept at the detention centre in CNP headquarters, Kasara for investigation, according to the Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation.
Among those arrested, Hira Lal Mardaniya, 22, and Mukti Prasad Gurau, both residents of Kawasoti, Nawalparasi have confessed they were involved in the killing of rhinos found dead on September 18 and 14. They were arrested on September 18.
Three rhinos were found dead in and around CNP recently.
The other arrested include Ashish Praja, 18, Man Singh Praja, 90, Kamal Bahadur Praja, 40, and Krishna Bahadur Praja, 18, arrested on September 5; Amar Bahadur Gurau, 55, Bhoj Bir Rana Magar, 70, Bishnu Prasad Gurau, 36, arrested on September 20 and Chandra Bahadur Shrestha, 48, Bhim Bahadur Kumal, 45, and Khadag Narayan Mahato, 50.
Various kind weapons, Rs 156,000 in cash and two motorcycles were also confiscated from the residences of the arrested.
Most of them have confessed their involvement in rhino poaching, said Shiva Raj Bhatta of the department. There is a possibility of busting a larger group, he added.
(Bron: http://www.nepalnews.com/)
Zo'n 100 zeldzame schildpadjes blokkeren $20 Miljoen kostend baggerproject in Burnaby Lake (Canada)
Turtles block $20M dredging project
22-09-2009 CBC, Canada
The City of Burnaby says it may sue the B.C. provincial government for the last-minute denial of permits needed to dredge Burnaby Lake — but the province says it's just trying to protect an endangered turtle.
Burnaby has been planning to dredge the 1.5-kilometre-long body of water for more than five years, trying to remove mud and plants like water lilies that have slowly been filling the lake, according to city officials.
Work was to begin Wednesday on the $20-million project.
"I'm shocked, I'm appalled, I can't believe that at this late date the [Environment] ministry is throwing more obstacles in the way of dredging the lake," Mayor Derek Corrigan told CBC News Tuesday.
"This is likely going to cost the province and the city millions of dollars if we can't go ahead with this project," Corrigan said.
Dredging some 250,000 cubic metres of sediment would increase the lake's usable surface area, allowing the city once again to host major rowing competitions.
Standing in the city's way is the endangered Western Painted Turtle. Burnaby Lake is the only place in the Lower Mainland with healthy population, according to an expert.
"If there's a chance for recovery of this species in the Lower Mainland [and] Fraser Valley, it's going to come from this population," said Vanessa Kilburn, an amphibian and reptile biologist with the Canadian Wildlife Service. "This is a really important population to keep around."
Dredging at this time of year, as the turtles are starting to hibernate, could kill the lake's population off, said Kilburn.
"The dredging machines chop up the sediment on the bottom and spit it out the back," Kilburn said. "We wouldn't even have known if the turtles were killed."
The project passed an environmental assessment that included plans to protect the turtles, Corrigan said.
When it became apparent this week, however, that it was too late in the year to trap and move the turtles successfully, the final permit required for work to begin was denied, according to an environment ministry spokesperson.
(Bron: http://www.cbc.ca/)
(Bron foto: CBC)
dinsdag 22 september 2009
600 Grizzly beren in en rond Yellowstone National Park (VS) krijgen weer beschermde status - Teveel beren worden illegaal doodgeschoten
Judge: Park grizzlies need protection
22-09-2009 By MATTHEW BROWN • Associated Press Writer, Great Falls Tribune, Montana, USA
BILLINGS — Facing the combined pressures of climate change, hunters and lax protections, 600 grizzly bears in and around Yellowstone National Park are going back on the threatened species list under a federal court order issued Monday.
The ruling highlighted climate change's devastation to whitebark pine forests, which produce nuts that some grizzlies rely upon as a mainstay.
With hundreds of thousands of the trees dead or dying over the past two decades, bears striking out in search of new food sources increasingly are being shot in conflicts with humans.
"There is a connection between whitebark pine and grizzly survival," U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy wrote in Monday's ruling.
Hunting for grizzlies is illegal. But at least 20 were killed last year by hunters acting in self-defense or after mistaking them for other animals.
The greater Yellowstone area of Montana, Idaho and Wyoming has one of the densest concentrations of grizzlies in the lower 48 states. The animals were declared recovered in March 2007 after bouncing back from near-extermination last century.
At the time, the grizzly bear program was touted by the Bush administration as a model framework for restoring at-risk species, successfully balancing conservation and the pressures of human development.
But in his ruling, Molloy sharply criticized the rationale behind the decision and ordered the Obama administration to immediately restore the animal's threatened status.
The 46-page ruling resolves a lawsuit brought by the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, a Bozeman group that had argued the bruins' recovery remained tenuous. A separate lawsuit in federal court in Idaho still is pending.
Molloy cited as a key factor in his decision the decline of whitebark pine, which has suffered widespread damage from forest fires, pine beetles and other factors that researchers say are exacerbated by a warming climate.
Government researchers have made similar links. However, those results were downplayed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in its 2007 decision.
"There is a disconnect between the studies the agency relies on here and its conclusions," Molloy wrote.
Molloy also said that state and federal conservation plans meant to protect Yellowstone-area grizzlies were inadequate. He said the government relied too heavily on population monitoring and failed to spell out what steps would be taken if grizzly numbers started to fall.
A Fish and Wildlife spokesman said Monday that Molloy's ruling was under review. Grizzlies were first listed as endangered in 1975. The government has spent more than $20 million on its effort to restore the species.
"We're going to take some time with this ruling because it's so significant," Fish and Wildlife spokesman Matt Kales said. "This is obviously a pretty big policy matter for us. Our first and foremost concern remains with the status of the bear."
Wyoming U.S. Rep. Cynthia Lummis, a Republican, called Molloy's ruling an "abuse" of the Endangered Species Act.
"Subverting the Endangered Species Act through judicial activism under the auspice of climate change would be laughable if the impacts weren't so dire for Wyoming's public land users," Lummis said.
Prior to Molloy's ruling, the concern in Wyoming had been that there were too many bears, not too few, Gov. David Freudenthal said Monday.
The conservation director for the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, Craig Kenworthy, said threats to grizzlies "are likely to accelerate" as climate change intensifies and more tree-killing beetles survive milder winters.
It's unknown how many of Yellowstone's grizzlies are heavily dependent on whitebark pine, said Gregg Losinski with Idaho Fish and Game.
"Yes it was a concern, but as far as a food source it never was found universally across the ecosystem for all the bears," said Losinski, member of a federal-states coordinating committee that oversees the region's grizzlies.
Four other groups totaling about 900 grizzlies — all in the Northwest —— have never lost their threatened status.
Full grown male grizzlies can weigh 800 pounds and stand 8 feet tall. Most are omnivores, meaning they eat both plants and animals.
As many as 50,000 of the animals once ranged the western half of the United States — striking terror in early European settlers who routinely shot, poisoned and trapped grizzlies until they were reduced to less than 2 percent of their historic range.
The Yellowstone-area population has grown from an estimated 200 animals in 1981 to more than 600 today.
Environmentalists said Monday's ruling underscored the need for government agencies to pay more heed to the damage climate change can cause.
Climate change was cited in the 2008 listing of polar bears as a threatened species, because warmer temperatures has melted sea ice that the bears depend on. And in 2006, concerns over climate change led to the listing of two species of coral, staghorn and elkhorn.
"The decline of the whitebark pine is one more wake-up call that we urgently need to address the cause of many species' impending extinctions," said Michael Robinson with the Center for Biological Diversity. Robinson's group is a plaintiff in the Idaho grizzly lawsuit that remains pending.
(Bron: http://www.greatfallstribune.com/)
(Bron foto: Great Falls Tribune)
Veel personeel in opspraak geraakte Indore dierentuin, Madhya Pradesh (India), ontslagen na dood dieren waaronder wit tijger welpje
Indore Zoo officials removed for deaths of animals
22-09-2009 SindhToday, India
Bhopal, Sep 22 (IANS) Stung by a series of deaths in the Indore zoo, including that of a white tiger cub, the civic agency has removed more than 25 employees, including the superintendent and the zoo in-charge, for negligence of duty, officials said Tuesday.
“While zoo in-charge R.B. Siddh has been suspended with five other staff members, superintendent B.L. Sharma and 10 others have been transferred. Besides, services of eight staff members have been terminated. Also, veterinary doctor Devendra Porwal has been issued a show-cause notice,” Indore Municipal Corporation Commissioner C.B. Singh told IANS by phone Tuesday.
The administrative revamp of the city zoo Monday came on the orders of Indore Mayor Uma Shashi Sharma.
“Upset over the recent deaths of animals in the Indore zoo, the mayor ordered the removal of several zoo staff members, including the zoo in-charge and the superintendent, for utter negligence shown by them in discharging their duties,” Singh said.
“The action was taken after a sambar (deer) died Sunday, following an attack by a neelgai (blue bull), inside its enclosure,” Singh added.
“Rajesh Kothari has been appointed the new in-charge of the zoo while Ramesh Verma is the new superintendent. Requisite measures are being taken for improving facilities at the zoo. In order to give better and timely medical facilities to the animals, the hospital situated inside the zoo would be made functional once again,” Singh said.
“The action has been taken in the wake of alleged irregularities during the last couple of months, which saw several animals including a white tiger cub, die,” Singh said.
One of the three white tiger cubs at Indore zoo died at the Mhow Veterinary College (MVC) Thursday, apparently as a result of complications caused by a gastric infection around a fortnight ago.
Another cub is undergoing treatment. The zoo officials attributed the tiger cub’s death to “infectious feline anaemia” and “kidney infection”.
A deer and two male black bucks housed at the Indore zoo died last week as a result of internal injuries sustained in a clash, supposedly sparked either by territorial ambitions or a desire to win the attention of a female inmate.
“Earlier, more than 20 rabbits had died of infection during heavy rains in July. But, the biggest shock was the death of a white tiger female cub at the zoo last week,” chairman of zoo administration Anil Bindal said.
[LM1]
(Bron: http://www.sindhtoday.net/)
Honolulu (Hawaii) verbiedt haaien tours - Inheemse bevolking Hawaii beschouwt haai als heilig
Honololu issues preliminary ban on shark tours
22-09-2009 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Canada East, Canada
HONOLULU - The Honolulu City Council has given preliminary approval to a ban on shark tour businesses operating on Oahu, according to The Honolulu Advertiser.
State law already prohibits the operation of shark tours within 4.8 kilometres of the shore. The measure before city council also would make it illegal to maintain an office, collect money and market shark tours businesses.
Some say profiting from shark tours is disrespectful because Native Hawaiians consider the animals to be sacred.
If passed, the measure would affect two businesses that currently operate out of the Haleiwa Small Boat Harbor. North Shore Shark Adventures and Hawaii Shark Encounters oppose the measure, saying their tours pose little danger to humans and little disturbance to sharks.
The Maui County Council adopted a similar ban earlier this year.
(Bron: http://www.canadaeast.com/)
(Bron foto: http://www.scubaoahu.com/shark_cage.html)
Ziekenhuis in St. Joseph, Missouri (VS), stopt gebruik katten voor intubatielessen na protesten PETA
Missouri hospital abandons use of cats after protest
22-09-2009 Connect Tristates, USA
ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) -- A northwest Missouri hospital is switching to high-tech mannequins for medical training classes after an animal rights group protested its use of live cats.
A spokeswoman for Heartland Regional Medical Center in St. Joseph said Monday the hospital will hold its first class using the $46,000 mannequins on Sept. 30. The classes teach health care workers how to place a tube down an infant's throat to help the baby breathe.
The hospital had previously used cats, whose throats are similar to that of a human infant.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals in June filed a protest with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. It said using live animals was unnecessary.
Hospital spokeswoman Marcy George said the change had more to do with advances in technology than with PETA's protest.
(Bron: http://www.connecttristates.com/)
(Bron foto: Connect Tristates)
Kat Smokey in Carisbrooke, Victoria (Australië), overleeft 13 kogels in kop....- Aantal aanslagen op katten en grote vogels in Victoria neemt toe
Cat survives 13 shots to the head
23-09-2009 The Age, Australia
SMOKEY, a tough Victorian country cat shot 13 times in the head with an air rifle last week, has survived the attack. Smokey, 9, had gone missing from its Carisbrooke home, eight kilometres from Maryborough in central Victoria, on Sunday, September 13.
It returned on Wednesday and the owners, noticing it was injured, took Smokey to a vet, who removed most of the pellets from the cat's head.
The distressed animal is heavily medicated and recovering at home, police said on Tuesday.
Sergeant Craig Pearse from Maryborough police said it appeared the cat's long-term memory was not affected by the attack because Smokey was able to find its way home. ''This is just a shocking incident where someone either working alone or in a group has shown no regard for animal life and left Smokey for dead,'' he said.
RSPCA Victorian president Dr Hugh Wirth described the act as ''utterly disgraceful''. He said the cat was expected to recover.
''This is typical of a whole range of attacks on animals, whether it's the city or the country,'' Dr Wirth said.









































































