Day: February 5, 2025

(Brazil) New investigation reveals dangers of Brazil’s Self-Control Law

https://animalequality.org/news/dangers-of-brazils-self-control-law/

  • In 2024, Animal Equality found major violations in São Paulo slaughterhouses, where cows and chickens were mistreated under Brazil’s Self-Control Law.
  • In 2022, an earlier investigation revealed cruelty at pig and cow slaughterhouses in Minas Gerais and Pará, warning about the dangers of the Self-Control Bill.
  • Workers were seen twisting animals’ tails, kicking them, and using electric shocks on sensitive areas like the head and genitals.
  • Some animals were skinned and dismembered while still alive.
  • These findings point to a global problem as U.S. slaughterhouses speed up production lines, increasing risks for animal cruelty.

Animal Equality’s investigation reveals the impact of Brazil’s 2022 Self-Control Law, which reduced government oversight of slaughterhouses. The findings uncover rampant cruelty and violations, with profits prioritized over animals, public health, and transparency.

Video on page or VIMEO Link: https://vimeo.com/1047226914

2024 investigation: São Paulo slaughterhouses

The latest investigation, featuring never-before-seen footage, uncovers significant failures in cow and chicken slaughterhouses in rural São Paulo. 

These facilities were already following a state-level version of the Self-Control Law before it was implemented across the country. Investigators found widespread violations of handling and slaughter rules set by Brazil’s Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock.

2022 investigation: Early warnings ignored

In 2022, Animal Equality issued an urgent warning about the risks of the Self-Control Bill. Investigating pig and cow slaughterhouses in the states of Minas Gerais and Pará, the team uncovered a critical shortage of government inspectors. 

Without proper oversight, workers were left to enforce safety and animal protection rules on their own, resulting in widespread violations. Despite these findings, the bill became law.

Between the 2022 and 2024 investigations, Animal Equality documented:

Intentional cruelty: 

  • Tail twisting and kicking animals in the face.
  • Use of high-frequency electric shocks on prohibited areas, including the head, tail, genitals, and anus.

Stunning failures: 

  • Animals were tied with ropes instead of being secured in proper stunning boxes, making effective stunning nearly impossible.
  • Captive bolt pistols were used incorrectly, leading to failed attempts to stun animals.
  • Broken stunning tools were not fixed, forcing some animals to endure up to seven failed stunning attempts.
  • No staff were assigned to ensure stunning was effective. When animals showed signs of consciousness–such as eye movement or lifting their heads–workers often did not repeat the stunning unless the animal became too agitated to manage.

Delayed slaughter: 

  • Stunned animals were left for over two minutes before slaughter, exceeding legal limits meant to prevent them from regaining consciousness:
    • Non-penetrating captive bolt pistols deliver a blunt impact to the head, causing a concussion without breaking the skull. Animals must be slaughtered within 30 seconds, as this method loses effectiveness quickly.
    • Penetrating captive bolt pistols use a bolt to penetrate the skull, causing deeper and longer-lasting unconsciousness. This method allows up to 60 seconds before slaughter must take place.
  • Delays beyond these limits caused animals to regain consciousness, leading to extreme suffering.

Mutilations while conscious: 

  • Workers did not wait the required three minutes after slaughter to ensure animals were dead before mutilating them. This resulted in animals being skinned and dismembered while alive. 

Poor facility conditions:

  • Overcrowded pens with more animals than recommended.
  • Animals left in extreme heat without shade or water.
  • Slippery floors causing frequent slips and falls.

(DE – TR) Turkey: Heifers in advanced stages of pregnancy held at Turkish border for four weeks during transport

https://www.animals-angels.de/en/news/news-detail/turkey-heifers-in-advanced-stages-of-pregnancy-held-at-turkish-border-for-four-weeks-during-transport.html

17-10-2024 News Animal Transports

Two transport vehicles carrying heavily pregnant heifers left Germany on September 12 and reached the Turkish border at Kapikule four days later, on September 16, where they were held for a month. The German authorities were aware of the acute emergency situation since September 23 but did not intervene. Between September 23 and October 2, the animals were briefly unloaded, provided with water and feed, and housed in a makeshift shelter. On October 2, they were loaded back onto the transport vehicles. The exact reasons for this decision remain unclear. However, there are rumors that unsanitary conditions, intense odors, and a fly infestation prompted this action. The German authorities took action when the animals were reloaded onto the trucks, but the measures taken were completely inadequate.

The conditions for the animals on the transports deteriorated with each passing day. Although they were fed and watered, the care provided was insufficient due to their advanced stages of pregnancy. Moreover, the transport vehicles were not cleaned, causing the cows to stand ankle-deep in their own excrement. During this time, and under these appalling conditions, several calves were born, none of which had a chance of survival. The first report of a dead animal was received on October 6.

On October 11, the state of Brandenburg, from which the animals originally came, issued a euthanasia order that mandated the slaughter of the cows by October 13. On the evening of October 14, the animals were transported to a slaughterhouse near the border in Edirne. Many heifers and newborn calves had already died on the transport vehicles. On October 15, the animals were slaughtered without anesthesia. The calves suffocated painfully inside their dying mothers. There is a much more humane method of euthanasia called placentally accessible euthanasia, which allows the unborn calves to be euthanized alongside their mothers.

The bodies of those animals that had already died before arriving at the slaughterhouse were left on the trucks to be dumped in a landfill later. As the teams from Animals’ Angels and Animal Welfare Foundation left the slaughterhouse, they were alerted by the loud mooing of an animal that had been left alive on the truck, which was now to be unloaded alongside the dead animals. We were able to arrange for an emergency slaughter of the animal on-site.

Urgent Call for a Transport Ban

Since 2010, Animals’ Angels and the Animal Welfare Foundation have called for an immediate end to animal transports to Turkey. The conditions at the Turkish border of Kapikule and the cruel death of the animals once again demonstrate that these transports are incompatible with animal welfare requirements, as stated in Article 3 of Regulation (EC) No. 1/2005: “No one shall carry out or arrange for the transport of animals if it is likely to cause them injury or unnecessary suffering.”

This case starkly highlights the urgent need for an immediate halt to such exports.

We will continue to remain on-site and work with a Turkish lawyer to initiate legal action. We demand clear and enforceable measures from the German government and the European Union to end the suffering of these animals.

VIDEO in German (from German TV Programme, “37 Grad”)

https://www.zdf.de/dokumentation/37-grad/37-schutzlos-ausgeliefert-100.html

(US) Eyewitness describes Wyoming wolf’s final hours in the Green River Bar

(US) Laughing Wyoming man is branded ‘evil’ over video of him kissing dying wolf after running it over with snowmobile ‘then torturing the animal to death’

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13305103/wolf-wyoming-cody-roberts-green-reiver-bar-disturbing-video-kissing.html