Day: May 12, 2025

(CA – JP) Flying Above the Law: Inside Canadian Horses’ Long Journey to Japan

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https://canadianhorsedefencecoalition.org/horse-dies-on-korean-air-flight-from-winnipeg-to-japan/

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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/mar/27/protests-at-inhumane-export-of-live-horses-to-japan-for-food

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https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/horses-japan-aircraft-1.7321374

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https://humanecanada.ca/en/your-humane-canada/news-and-reports/news/ottawa-eyeing-new-ways-to-ban-export-of-horses-for-slaughter-in-japan

Ottawa eyeing new ways to ban export of horses for slaughter in Japan

Published Feb 13, 2025 at 11:00am

Ottawa is eyeing fresh ways to ban the export of live horses to Japan for slaughter to produce an expensive sashimi delicacy, after the proroguing of Parliament last month halted a bill sponsored by a Liberal MP that would have outlawed the practice.

The Liberal government is considering introducing regulations blocking the exports so it can keep a 2021 election promise before Canadians return to the polls this year.

An estimated 50,000 horses, many of which are large draft horses, have been exported since 2013, with some journeys exceeding the permitted limit of 28 hours.

In 2022 and 2023, 2,500 live horses a year were flown from Edmonton, Calgary and Winnipeg to Japan for slaughter for their meat, including to produce basashi, an expensive sashimi delicacy.

Animal-welfare groups and several Canadian celebrities, including singer-songwriters Bryan Adams and Jann Arden and classical guitarist Liona Boyd, have been applying pressure on Canada to follow the lead of other countries, including the United States, and ban the export of live horses.

“It breaks my heart that thousands of horses endure extreme suffering in terrifying transports every year, only to die in a senseless slaughter. Horses are not commodities; they are loyal companions,” Ms. Boyd said in a statement.

“As a lifelong horse lover, I can’t stand by while they endure such cruelty. I’m urging the government to honor its promise – Canadians have spoken, and we beseech an end to this suffering now.”

In December, 2021, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau issued a mandate to the then-agriculture minister to ban the export of live horses, to honour the Liberals’election pledge.

But a private member’s bill banning the export of live horses, supported by the government, was held up in the Senate for months last year, and had not passed the stages required to become law when Parliament was prorogued.

Bill C-355, sponsored by Liberal MP Tim Louis, was sharply criticized by Don Plett, leader of the Conservatives in the Senate, and the Tories are unlikely to support it when Parliament returns, destroying its chances of becoming law before the election this year.

Agriculture Minister Lawrence MacAulay is now looking at other ways to enforce a ban, including by issuing regulations that would not require a vote or debates by the Commons and Senate.

In 2023, Ottawa introduced regulations to ban the import of elephant ivory and rhino horn, including by trophy hunters.

“The Government remains committed to ending the export of live horses by air for slaughter,” Mr. MacAulay’s spokesperson, Annie Cullinan, said in a statement, noting the commitment set out in the minister’s mandate letter and the government’s support of Mr. Louis’s initiative.

“We believe that a legislative change would be the most efficient and concrete way to end this practice, however, given that Parliament is currently prorogued, we are exploring other options.”

Animal-welfare groups have been urging the government to implement a ban before the next election, warning that the Liberals could face accusations of failing to keep their promises.

Kaitlyn Mitchell, director of legal advocacy at Animal Justice, said that “the vast majority of Canadians –across political lines – want a ban, and the government explicitly promised to deliver it.”

“Minister MacAulay has the power to act, whether by introducing regulations now or through a bill when Parliament returns,” she said. “This is a chance to follow through on a commitment that matters to many voters and for the Liberals to show before the next election that they can be trusted to keep their promises.”

But Mr. Plett warned against a ban, and shutting down the export trade in horses for meat.

“When our entire nation is on edge due to the U.S. President’s attack on our export markets, it would be outrageous for this government to pile on by shutting down a premium agricultural export market. This is a time to stand behind our farmers, not be caving in to animal rights extremists,” he said.

A Japanese animal-welfare organization, Life Investigation Agency, last year obtained official government reports of shipments of horses from Canada, including pregnant mares, in crates.

The records, acquired through Japan’s freedom of information laws, showed that some horses had difficulty standing and fell during flight. Some suffered injuries such as a fractured leg, or died on board or in quarantine after arriving in Japan. Several experienced heat stroke, dehydration and physical compression on the journey, with one horse subjected to accidental suffocation.

On one flight from Edmonton in January last year, 85 horses were flown in crates to Kagoshima, and four horses fell within their crates during the flight. A mare was severely injured from the fall and died. Upon arrival in Japan, the three other horses were found collapsed in their crates, and were suffering shortness of breath. Two had injuries so severe they died shortly after arrival.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency, which monitors the transports and inspects the animals in Canada to ensure welfare standards are adhered to, called the reports troubling when they came to light last year and said it was looking into them.

Emerging Animal Rights and Their Anthropo-, Zoo- and Ecocentric Justifications

April 23, 2025

https://www.ejiltalk.org/emerging-animal-rights-and-their-anthropo-zoo-and-ecocentric-justifications/

Written by Saskia Stucki

Editor’s note: This post is part of the EJIL:Talk! Symposium on ‘Expanding Human Rights Protection to Non-Human Subjects? African, Inter-American and European Perspectives.’

The idea of expanding the normative framework of human rights to nonhuman entities is not quite new, but ever-so topical in the age of AI, corporate human rights, and the rise of the global Rights of Nature movement. Although animals may be paradigmatic (non)human rights aspirants, animal rights proper have not yet been adjudicated, let alone recognized, by the ‘sister regional human rights courts’ or international human rights bodies.

In recent years, however, animal rights have increasingly become an issue before domestic courts, even highest courts, such as the Supreme Court of India, the Constitutional Court of Ecuador, the Islamabad High Court, or a lower court in Mendoza (Argentina). It is interesting to note that the judicial recognition of animal rights is so far more or less exclusively driven not by European or North American courts, but by courts from the Global South, which seems to refute the charge of “cultural imperialism” or Eurocentrism that is sometimes attached to the idea of universal animal rights. Given these contemporary developments in domestic animal rights law, and following a “bottom-up” approach to the future formation of a global animal rights law, the question seems not if, but when animal rights will advance to the world stage and eventually enter the halls of international (non)human rights courts.

Emerging animal rights and their pluralistic drivers

Since its inception, the idea of animal rights has had a mostly theoretical existence. In the absence of any legally institutionalized rights, the concept of animal rights typically relates to potential fundamental rights that (nonhuman) animals should have and that ought to be recognized and respected by human laws. Only recently, but with accelerating pace, have courts around the world started to deliberate and recognize actual legal rights of animals (see here for an overview of global animal rights jurisprudence).

One noteworthy difference between the ideal animal rights conceived by theorists and the real animal rights recognized in legal practice is the justificatory pluralism driving the emergence of the latter (as opposed to the justificatory monism – mostly of the naturalistic variant – that tends to ground the former). That is, while animal rights in theory are typically justified with reference to some morally relevant rights-generative natural quality of animals, animal rights in practice seem to be grounded in a broader and more heterogenous mix of divergent yet mutually complementing rationales.

Elsewhere, I have argued that there are both principled and prudential reasons that warrant institutional recognition of animal rights. In short, the principled argument for animal rights is of an ethical nature (a matter of justice or morality) and operates with intrinsic criteria, such as animals’ sentience, dignity, vulnerability, exploitability, or experiences of injustice. By contrast, the prudential argument for animal rights is of an instrumental nature (animal rights as a means of promoting other ends, e.g. the protection of humans or the environment) and relies on extrinsic considerations, such as social and environmental benefits that may result from cultivating animal rights-respecting practices.

Here, I will chart a slightly adapted, tripartite typology, based on the anthropocentric, zoocentric, and ecocentric justifications underpinning the recognition of animal rights in practice.

Anthropocentric underpinnings of animal rights

From an anthropocentric point of view, animal rights are justified instrumentally with their utility or benefits for human individuals or societies. Here, the recognition of animal rights is primarily motivated by and derivative of human interests, and functions as an indirect way of protecting or promoting certain human goods, such as human rights or health. Commonly invoked anthropocentric reasons for recognizing animal rights relate to:

  • The linkages between human and animal (in)justice: a growing body of research (see here for an overview) suggests a correlation between discriminatory (e.g. sexist, racist, speciesist) and rights-affirming social attitudes as well as empathy towards human outgroups and animals. Similarly, important links seem to exist between violence against humans and animals, both on the level of interpersonal (e.g. domestic or sadistic) and collective violence (e.g. animalistic dehumanization). Recognizing – and respecting – animal rights may thus concomitantly contribute to the protection of (vulnerable and marginalized) humans.
  • Animal exploitation as a major driver of environmental human rights and public health threats: the need to establish animal rights as a bulwark against extractive exploitation is also increasingly debated in the context of protecting humans against existential environmental risks. This is because animal exploitation (notably industrial animal farming and wildlife trade) is a major driver of global health threats (such as the emergence of zoonotic diseases and antimicrobial resistance) and of ecological human rights threats (such as climate change and biodiversity loss).
  • Cultural and religious reasons: certain (beloved or revered) animals are more equal than others, and are afforded special legal protections for cultural or religious reasons. For example, some courts, notably in Latin America, have recognized rights of companion animals (such as a dog in Colombia) as part of the protection of multispecies families and the affective bonds that humans have with their nonhuman family members. Another relevant example is the 2024 He Whakaputanga Moana Treaty (Declaration for the Ocean) – an Indigenous treaty that recognizes whales as legal persons, inter alia, because whales are considered ancestral beings and an integral part of a healthy ecosystem.

Zoocentric constructions of animal rights

Within a zoocentric frame of reference, animal rights are justified with intrinsic qualities of animals, such as their dignity or inherent value, sentience, personhood or subjecthood, or vulnerability. Here, the recognition of animal rights is primarily motivated by and centred on a legal concern for animals and their interests per se, irrespective of any instrumental or utilitarian considerations. In the words of the Constitutional Court of Ecuador, “animals should not be protected only from an ecosystemic perspective or with a view to the needs of human beings, but mainly from a perspective that focuses on their individuality and intrinsic value”. Courts typically arrive at zoocentric animal rights through two different legal avenues:

  • Subjectification of animal welfare laws: some courts have derived animal rights from existing animal welfare laws, by extracting therefrom subjective animal rights as implicit correlatives of explicit human duties. For example, in a landmark judgment from 2014 (which has since been somewhat relativized and reversed), the Supreme Court of India recognized a range of animal rights, such as the right to life and security, protection against pain, suffering, and torture, to food and shelter, based on the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act. It further elevated these statutory rights to the status of fundamental rights by reading them alongside the constitutional provision on animal protection and compassion (the “magna carta of animal rights”).
  • Animalization of fundamental (human) rights: other courts, notably in the Americas, have probed the possibility of extending certain human rights to animals, such as the prohibition of slavery, or the procedural right of habeas corpus and the underlying substantive right to freedom. In the USA, courts have thus far declined to enlarge the protective scope of fundamental rights to animals other than humans (of course, corporations are a different story). By contrast, courts in Latin America (e.g. in Argentina and Colombia) have recognized animal rights based on a dynamic and extensive reading of constitutional rights (notably the right to habeas corpus).

Ecocentric foundations of animal rights

From an ecocentric perspective, animal rights are recognized in an eco-constitutional legal context (e.g. a “sociobiocentric” constitution) and as part of a holistic approach to environmental protection and rights. Against the backdrop of exacerbating ecological pressures in the Anthropocene, the environmental dimension of animal rights (as well as, conversely, the animal dimension of environmental rights) has become increasingly important in recent years. Courts, too, have been responsive to the human-animal-environment nexus, by converging or integrating the rights of humans, animals, and nature.

  • (Wild) animal rights as part of rights of nature: one form of ecocentric animal rights is the recognition of (wild) animal rights as an integral (individual) dimension of the rights of nature. The integration of animal rights into the rights of nature framework has been elaborated at length by the Constitutional Court of Ecuador. In this context, some commentators observe a convergence between (animalized) rights of nature and (naturalized) animal rights, drawing on the obvious overlap and synergies between the two species of rights.
  • Ecological interdependence of human and animal rights: lastly – and this might be the clearest example of the confluence of anthropocentric, zoocentric, and ecocentric motives that are conjoined in the configuration of emerging animal rights – animal rights can be justified on the grounds of their ecologically mediated interrelation with human rights. For example, the Islamabad High Court has noted the “interdependence of living beings” and recognized animal rights alongside, and as an integral part of, the human right to life and environmental protection.

A win-win-win for humans, animals, and the environment

As this overview has shown, the recognition of animal rights in practice is only partially motivated by (intrinsic, ethical) concern for animals, and concurrently catalysed by instrumental concern for a variety of human interests and environmental considerations. It is this interplay of anthropocentric, zoocentric, and ecocentric rationales that is driving the emergence of animal rights alongside human rights and environmental rights. Some commentators contend that the anthropocentric and ecocentric reasonings that co-constitute real animal rights provide for a merely “weak grounding for animal rights”. Others dispute that these ulterior motives work to constitute “genuine animal rights” altogether. I would however argue, on the contrary, that this justificatory pluralism makes for a more diverse and democratic, resilient, rhetorically powerful, and thus ultimately stronger legal footing for animal rights in the real world. The pluralistic foundations of emerging animal rights indicate that they can be plausibly and palatably framed as a win-win-win situation. Simply put, animal rights are good for humans, animals, and the precious – and precarious – planet we all share.

(EU) EURCAW-Aqua launches its new portal as the EU’s reference for animal welfare in aquaculture

https://www.mispeces.com/en/news/EURCAW-Aqua-launches-its-new-portal-as-the-EUs-reference-for-animal-welfare-in-aquaculture/

Crete, Greece, 13 January 2025 | The EURCAW-Aqua portal provides information, technical guidance, and educational resources on animal welfare in aquaculture

The European Union Reference Centre for Animal Welfare in Aquaculture (EURCAW-Aqua) has unveiled its newly launched website, set to become a cornerstone for advancing animal welfare practices in aquaculture across Europe. The platform, available at www.eurcaw-aqua.eu, is tailored for policymakers, researchers, national authorities, and the general public who are keen to drive improvements in aquaculture production methods.

The website offers an extensive range of resources, including research articles, technical guides, and best practices recommendations aimed at ensuring ethical and sustainable treatment of fish, crustaceans, and molluscs. Additionally, it features interactive educational materials, online seminars, and straightforward explanations of EU animal welfare regulations.

Dr Michael Pavlidis, a Professor at the University of Crete and Director of EURCAW-Aqua, commented: “The portal is designed to foster knowledge-sharing, build communities, and empower stakeholders to make well-informed, compassionate decisions that priories the health and welfare of aquatic animals, contributing to a more sustainable future.”

This EU-funded initiative also boasts an up-to-date new section, as well as details of key events such as conferences and training programs, ensuring that professionals and decision-makers stay informed about the latest developments and research in the field.

EURCAW-Aqua reaffirms its dedication to promoting ethical and sustainable aquaculture practices, collaborating with EU Members States to exceed current animal welfare standards. This initiative represents a significant step forward in fostering a more humane approach to aquaculture production.

For further information, visit

https://www.eurcaw-aqua.eu/

Pakistan – Animal Rights Activists Come Face To Face With Man Threatening To Shoot Stray Dogs.

A video from Lahore has ignited a heated debate on social media about how handle the city’s stray dog population.

The footage shows a tense confrontation between 2 activists and a local resident over the fate of stray dogs in the neighborhood.

In the video the activists question the man about his call to the police; directly asking if he would shoot them. The man openly admits he would, prompting the activists to remind him that a court order prohibits the shooting of stray dogs, warning him of possible legal consequences, including jail time, if he does.

The man however holds his position; saying that he was attacked by 4 stray dogs whilst out taking his morning walk. He insists that his main concern is for the safety of residents as stray dogs pose a threat in residential areas.

The activists argue that the dogs are vaccinated and maybe he should simply change his walking route !

The situation escalates when the police arrive – the activists accuse the police of shooting the dogs, but the police argue that they are responding to a residents complaint, but that no animals were harmed. Despite the police response, the activists remained unconvinced.

So here we are again with another stray dogs issue. Sterilisation of dogs by authorities would over time reduce numbers and effectively save long term finances all round; BUT, DOES ANYONE LISTEN ?

USA – Over 300 Lab Animals, Just The Start Of Many More, Euthanised Due To Trump’s Wrecking Policies.

Here we go again, ‘Euthanised’, and not ‘Murdered With Intent’.

Hundreds of lab animals left behind following the Trump Administrations ‘Health and Human Services’ cuts have reportedly been Euthanised.

Of the more than 900 animals located at a West Virginia based National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health facility; more than a third were murdered with intent there last week following Trump Administration layoffs.

Now scientists warn that this concerning outcome could happen again as the National Institutes for Health caps indirect costs, including facilities and administration costs.

‘If the animals can’t be fed and cared for properly, then they are going to have to be sacrificed’ said Dr. Paul Locke; an environmental health scientist, attorney and professor at the John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. ‘And that to me is just a parade of horribles’.

Some may tell you that this culling is necessary as it means that animal research is going to end; but this is simply not the case. Animal research will not end, it will simply go elsewhere.

Where it would go remains to be seen said Dr. Locke; but the future for animal testing is ‘murky’. Locke said his guess is that it could continue in US, but in a way where it escapes protection and there is a lot less protection for the animals.

Animal groups dispute the claim that lab animals are such a critical part of US health research.

The failure rates for treatments for cancers, for sepsis and for Alzheimers disease go on and fail in humans, because they are tested originally on animals; ie different species !

The simple facts are biological – human biology is different to animal biology. There needs to be a transition away from animal testing while alternatives are developed.