Day: November 24, 2023

SAV.

Check out a lot about all the work for Serbian stray animals by visiting our old site at

Puppies drowned and their bodies hung from trees:

There is some fast jet, but that is ‘me’.

Find out more about Serbian strays at:

It was difficult, with many threats from the Serbian government. But, if you believe you are right then you stick with. What we do in life, echoes in eternity.

As a result of continuous “questioning” on the issue; they are now threatening to close the shelter “Alex” as some kind of revenge..

This is not going to stop us – we eagerly await a response from the EU which should definitely give us confirmation that export consignments took place. 

Past links and photos:
https://serbiananimalsvoice.com/2015/09/26/further-news-about-exports-to-israel/
https://serbiananimalsvoice.com/2015/09/18/serbia-breaking-news-serbia-exports-live-sheep-to-israel/
https://serbiananimalsvoice.com/2015/09/21/england-sav-now-write-to-eu-commissioner-hahn-regarding-serbia-israeli-live-animal-transport/
Was our persistence a waste of time ? – we think not.
But the very worrying aspect of this is the threats made to welfare groups by the Serbian Ministry when outsiders question them or anything they do – a shelter could have now been closed and animals back on the street to be killed by shinters and authorities.

Mark

Blue whales: Ocean giants return to ‘safe’ tropical haven.

Scientists think blue whales may breed in the waters around the Seychelles

Blue whales: Ocean giants return to ‘safe’ tropical haven

By Victoria Gill and Kate Stephens

Science team, BBC News

Blue whales – the largest animals on Earth – are making their home in a part of the Indian Ocean where they were wiped out by whaling decades ago.

Researchers and filmmakers in the Seychelles captured footage of the whales in 2020 and 2021. It features in the Imax film Blue Whales 3D.

But a year of underwater audio recording revealed the animals spend months in the region.

This means they could be breeding there, scientists say.

The researchers, including scientists from the University of Seychelles, described the discovery as a “conservation win” after the Soviet whaling fleet decimated the population in the 1960s.

One of the lead investigators, Dr Kate Stafford, told BBC News: “It turns out if you stop killing animals on mass scales and you give them a chance to rebound, they can recover.”

Continue reading at:

Blue whales: Ocean giants return to ‘safe’ tropical haven – BBC News

Regards Mark

EU: Court of Justice of the European Union ruling exposes limitations of cosmetics animal testing ban.

24 November 2023

The Court of Justice of the European Union has ruled against German chemicals company Symrise AG, who challenged a European Chemicals Agency request to perform animal testing on two cosmetic ingredients. This means additional animal testing may be demanded by regulators to assess the safety of cosmetic ingredients, despite the EU ban on animal testing for cosmetics in place since 2013.

In 2004, the EU responded to citizens’ long-standing concerns about animal testing for cosmetic products by introducing a ban to prohibit the testing of finished cosmetic products and cosmetic ingredients on animals. The testing ban was followed by another ban to prohibit the marketing of finished cosmetic products and ingredients in the EU which are tested on animals, which became fully effective in 2013. 

Despite the bans, the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) has established that in certain cases, widely used cosmetic ingredients with a long history of safe use must be tested on animals to comply with the Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals (REACH) Regulation. 

In 2018, the company Symrise AG challenged ECHA’s request to test two ingredients in its sunscreen product on 5,500 animals, refusing to carry out further animal testing that undermines the EU cosmetics bans. Following a legal battle between the two parties, the Court of Justice of the European Union has now delivered its official decision, dismissing the action brought by Symrise AG, and thus allowing ingredients used exclusively in cosmetics to be tested on animals under REACH to assess the safety risks of workers who may be exposed to the ingredients.

But the wishes of citizens are clear: animals must not suffer and die for the sake of cosmetics. The recent European Citizens Initiative (ECI) Save Cruelty Free Cosmetics –  Commit to a Europe without animal testing gave clarity to EU citizens’ voices, calling on the Commission to protect and strengthen the cosmetics animal testing ban.

Following this ruling, it’s clearer than ever that we need a chemicals roadmap.   

Eurogroup for Animals is deeply concerned by this decision, as it goes against the expectations and wishes of citizens and could lead to the demand of animal testing at the cost of thousands more animal lives. In its reply to the ECI Save Cruelty Free Cosmetics, the European Commission mentioned that its response might be affected by the Court’s ruling in the Symrise AG case. Now that the Court has ruled, we are regrettably witnessing a step backwards. This case will set a precedent that will pave the way for more animal testing of cosmetic ingredients to meet the requirement under REACH. 

These loopholes in the cosmetics animal testing ban are indicative of a regulatory system that is, at the moment, unable to follow scientific progress on non-animal testing approaches. This is why it is imperative that the Commission delivers on the promise for a roadmap towards phasing out animal testing for chemical safety assessments. Eurogroup for Animals, together with fellow ECI organiser NGOs, aim to ensure that a concrete and actionable framework with specific milestones is delivered.

Regards Mark

EU: Ombudsman complaint: the EC has failed to deliver on the animal welfare ECI



23 November 2023

Press Release

For the very first time, more than 30 animal protection organisations made an official complaint to the European Ombudsman against the European Commission’s failure to uphold its commitment to a European Citizens’ Initiative in which 1.4 million citizens asked for a ban on cages.

In its answer to the End the Cage Age European Citizens Initiative (ECI), published in June 2021, the European Commission (EC) promised that by the end of 2023, it would put forward a legislative proposal to phase out and finally prohibit the use of cages for the listed animal species. Yet, in the recent work programme for the rest of the political term, the Kept Animals Regulation, which should have included the plan, was missing.. This means that this Regulation will now be left to the fate of the next Commission, creating heavy uncertainty on when the promised Regulation will be published.

In their complaint to the Ombudsman, the organisations said that the EC has failed to act in accordance with the rules governing the European Citizens’ Initiatives after generating legitimate expectations among European citizens. These shortcomings present a case of maladministration, both in light of Regulation(EU) 2019/788 and the very raison d’être of European Citizens’ Initiatives as an instrument of transnational democracy.

Prior to backtracking from its promise, the EC repeatedly confirmed that it was working towards the 2023 timeline, with multiple mentions of this date being made publicly by Commissioner for Health and Food Safety Stella Kyriakides, in the EC’s answers to parliamentary questions, at the EU Platform on Animal Welfare, and in various communications on the Farm to Fork Strategy.

Before making the official complaint to the Ombudsman, the organisations formally asked the Commission to come forward with a definite timeline for the publication of the legislative proposals within the current term, to fulfil its obligation to the ECI End the Cage Age. Yet, the EC has failed to provide an exhaustive reply to this request.

In addition to the cages ECI, 1.5 million citizens also asked for a ban on fur farming and the placement of fur products on the European market. The reply would also have been included in the Kept Animals Regulations, as transpired in the leaked Impact Assessment. In the latest Eurobarometer an overwhelming majority of European Citizens clearly said they want the EU to do more to protect animals.

A delay in the release of updated animal welfare legislation will also cost European farmers and food businesses, as this is a time where they need to reinvest in farming systems, and, unless they get a clear indication, they might invest in systems that are not future-proof.  While the regulation to phase out cages continues to be pending, 700 million farm animals continue to suffer in cages in Europe each year.

The EC made clear expectations to citizens, but in the moment of truth, has let them down. This calls into question a core value of EU Institutions: democracy. The ECI was purposely launched to allow citizens to actively participate in policy-making processes. But what good does that do if their voices continue to be unheard?

Reineke Hameleers, CEO, Eurogroup for Animals

Regards Mark