Day: December 7, 2023

UK: Election Looming – So MPs Attempt to Revive Animal Welfare Measures – Anyone With Any Sense Would !!

MPs attempt to revive animal welfare measures – BBC News

Animal-loving backbench MPs are trying to breathe new life into welfare legislation quietly dropped by the government last year.

Plans to ban trophy hunting imports, live animal exports and crack down on puppy smuggling were included in the 2019 Conservative election manifesto.

Three MPs are now attempting to get some of these policies into law.

Labour’s John Spellar has launched a Private Members Bill (PMB) to ban hunting trophies.

Two Tory MPs – Selaine Saxby and Anna Firth – have launched separate PMBs to ban live animal exports and make pet abduction a criminal offence.

These two measures were originally included in the Kept Animals Bill, which was dropped by the government over fears it could be used to force a vote on hunting – a deeply divisive issue in the Conservative Party.

On Wednesday, Ms Saxby tabled a PMB to restrict the import of dogs, cats and ferrets to crack down on pet trade.

The RPSCA thanked Ms Saxby for “rescuing” the plans, which they say are crucial for ending puppy farming – where dogs often kept in terrible conditions which would be illegal in the UK, and used to breed multiple litters.

David Bowles, head of public affairs at the RSPCA, said: “Buying an imported puppy leaves new owners open to the very real risk that they are supporting cruel overseas puppy farming.

“We are delighted that Selaine Saxby’s Bill will give the UK government another opportunity to support an end to this cruel trade.”

Ms Firth introduced a PMB to specifically criminalise abducting cats, dogs, and other common pets.

PMBs rarely become law without the support of government, as they do not get the same amount of time dedicated to government businesses.The government has been under pressure to dedicate government time to fresh legislation to fulfil a manifesto commitment to ban the import of hunting trophies into Great Britain.

Every year, hunters from the UK travel abroad, often to southern Africa, and pay thousands of pounds to legally shoot animals, such as lions and elephants.

Under current rules, with the right paperwork, they can then bring trophies, such as stuffed heads or horns, back to the UK.

The measures had been expected in government legislation but ministers instead backed a PMB from Conservative MP Henry Smith during the last parliamentary session.

It passed the Commons comfortably, but ran out of time as its face opposition in the House of Lords.

Time for PMBs are allocated by a lottery – 20 MPs are randomly chosen for a chance to debate their bill on one of seven Fridays set aside for this purpose.

The top seven MPs get priority for these debating slots.

Julie Elliott, Labour MP for Sunderland Central, won the top spot in the ballot, giving her first priority. Her PMB seeks to level the banking sector’s competitive field by modernising rules that currently restrict building societies’ lending abilities.

Regards Mark

You bet they are under pressure ! – we will continue to make this an issue right up until election day – about 1 year max away.

The government has been under pressure to dedicate government time to fresh legislation to fulfil a manifesto commitment to ban the import of hunting trophies into Great Britain.

Still Paradise Lost.

A lucrative underground trade risks undermining research, creating new pandemics and pushing a recently abundant species to the brinkIn 2019, Jonah Sacha, a researcher at Oregon Health and Science University, received a delivery of 20 monkeys from Mauritius. As part of his research into stem-cell transplants as an HIV treatment, he performs tests on long-tailed macaques.

Read full story at  $20,000 monkeys: inside the booming illicit trade for lab animals | Global development | The Guardian

Regards Mark

Angry  – just a bit; see:

UK / Mauritius: ‘Paradise Lost’ – 35 Years On (for us) and Mauritius Still Supplies Primates to the UK for Research. – World Animals Voice 

England: Ricky Gervais donates nearly £2 million to 11 animal charities worldwide from his latest tour !

Ricky Gervais donates nearly £2 million to animal charities

The comedian, who is vegan, has been a long-standing advocate for animal rights

Ricky Gervais donates nearly £2 million to animal charities | Evening Standard

Comedian Ricky Gervais has donated £1.9 million to animal charities across the globe. 

The stand-up and creator of television shows such as After Life and The Office, has donated a substantial sum raised from ticket sales from his latest Armageddon world tour

The money will be split equally between 11 worldwide animal charities that have been chosen by Gervais.

These include All Dogs Matter, Animal SOS Sri Lanka, Catastrophes Cat Rescue, Chaldon Animal Sanctuary, Dogs On The Streets, Helping Rhinos, Millions of Friends, Mira Dogs, Paws2Rescue, PDSA and Wild Futures. 

About the move, BAFTA, Emmy and Golden-Globe winning comic Gervais, 62, said: “I hope the dogs, cats, rhinos and monkeys invest this money wisely, because when my career goes tits up I’ll need it back.” 

In an effort to take action against ticket touts, Platinum Tickets for the Armageddon tour went on sale to guarantee premium seats at market rates, with the extra profits from these ticket sales going to Gervais’s animal charities.

Gervais, a vegan, is a long-standing supporter of animal rights and has put his name to various initiatives in the past. 

Earlier this year, he supported a campaign to end bear bile farming in Vietnam, where bears, trapped in small cages, are subjected to a painful method of extracting bile for use in traditional medicine.

Top man !

Regards Mark

England: Breaking – Animal Rights Advocate Benjamin Zephaniah dies.

Breaking – Animal Rights Advocate Benjamin Zephaniah dies

A very bad day for animal rights

He was diagnosed with a brain tumour eight weeks ago, a post on his Instagram page said, describing him as a “true pioneer and innovator” who “gave the world so much”.

Writer and poet Benjamin Zephaniah dies (msn.com)

More to come when more known

Regards Mark