Category: General News

USA: Animal Rights Groups File Lawsuit Against the Padres and C5 Rodeo.

Animal rights groups have filed a lawsuit to stop a three-day rodeo planned next year at Petco Park, which the groups allege will lead to the abuse of animals featured in the event.

The lawsuit against the Padres and C5 Rodeo, the company operating the San Diego Rodeo, was filed Thursday in San Diego Superior Court. The San Diego Rodeo is planned for Jan. 12-14, the first-ever rodeo to be held at the ballpark and the first time a rodeo has been held in the city of San Diego since the 1980s.

The plaintiffs, the animal rights groups Animal Protection and Rescue League and Showing Animals Respect and Kindness, allege the rodeo company conducting the event, C5 Rodeo, utilizes electric prods and similar devices to shock animals.

“The rodeos tie tight bucking straps around their abdomens and then they often actually shock the horses before they ride into the arena with a rider on their back and that’s why they’re bucking wildly and they sometimes fall down,” said Bryan Pease, the San Diego attorney who is representing the animal rights groups in the lawsuit.

The lawsuit also alleges that the Padres and C5 Rodeo are violating San Diego’s municipal code which prohibits non-service animals from being at Petco Park during a Padres event.

“They haven’t sought any sort of special exemption or anything thing. They just plan to go ahead with bringing farm animals into Petco park so that men can chase them around and wrestle and lasso them and electric shock them, which is actually how the so-called bucking broncos end up acting the way they do,” Pease said.

In a statement to NBC 7, a spokesperson for C5 Rodeo said: “In our preparations for the San Diego Rodeo, we have worked with industry professionals to establish and implement animal safety measures. We are committed to providing the very best care for the contestants and livestock and abide all California laws regulating the treatment and use of animals.”

Pease also authored a resolution that calls for the city to pass an ordinance banning electric devices at rodeos. The resolution, which was passed unanimously by the San Diego County Democratic Central Committee last month, also calls for San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria to deny an event permit for the January rodeo.

A Padres spokesman said no comment could be provided regarding the lawsuit.

But regarding the rodeo itself, the Padres said,  “We have been assured by the group that is hosting this event that the safety, security and well-being of the contestants and livestock of the San Diego Rodeo are of the utmost importance. They are event professionals who are experts in livestock handling and care, as well as pre-event, event and post-event care for the contestants. Animal welfare is a major ongoing initiative of the professional sport of rodeo and the San Diego Rodeo, and the event hosts pledge to continue the strict enforcement of these rules and regulations.”

NBC 7 reached out to Petco, which pays for naming rights to the Padres’ stadium but does not have a hand in ballpark operations, for comment but has not heard back.

The city of San Diego says they have not received a special event permit application for this event yet, but they noted that it is not due until two weeks prior to the event.

Regards Mark

Animal rights groups sue to stop 3-day San Diego Rodeo at Petco Park (msn.com)

EU / South America: Serious shortcomings revealed by audit of horse meat production in South America for EU market.

6 November 2023

AWF

The European Commission carried out an audit of facilities in Argentina and Uruguay that produce horse meat for the EU market, in order to monitor the implementation and enforcement of EU legislation in the areas of food safety and animal health and welfare. The results reveal serious concerns regarding traceability and animal health.

Whilst the audits took place in November 2022, the results have just only just been released. 

In Uruguay, concerns were raised regarding the robustness of the identification and traceability system. There is no traceability on whether horses have been administered veterinary medical treatments that may compromise their health and that should prevent them entering the food chain. 

Unidentified horses from Brazil were also found to enter the food chain in Uruguay, which is in conflict with the fact that horse meat imports from Brazil were suspended in 2017 due to food safety concerns.

In Argentina, shortcomings in horse identification and traceability, as well as the reliability of supporting documentation, were raised. Guarantees concerning compliance with EU medical treatments requirements are currently based on owners’ sworn declarations, which the audit found to be insufficiently reliable or false.

The last audit took place in 2018, where similar shortcomings were found.

During such audits, EU Regulation 1099/2009 on the protection of animals at the time of killing has been confirmed to be systematically breached. However the latest audit reported finding few animal welfare problems. Facilities are informed in advance of the dates that inspectors will visit.

Animal Welfare Foundation believes that pre-warning facilities of upcoming audits allows them to manipulate results and conceal poor conditions which compromise animal welfare.

We call for respect for EU equivalent animal welfare standards in exporting countries, not only for slaughter but also for transport and assembly centres. 

Access to the European market should be conditioned on compliance with traceability and food safety standards, including veterinary drug use, equivalent to those applied in the EU.

Since compliance with EU Regulations, particularly EU Regulation 1099/2009 cannot be guaranteed, horse meat imports should be immediately suspended from Uruguay and Argentina. 

Regards Mark

USA: Animal Rights Activist Convicted of Felony for Rescuing Sick Chickens

Lawyer, animal rights activist, and Direct Action Everywhere founder Wayne Hsiung speaks with an officer from the Sonoma County, California, Sheriff’s Office during an action at Reichardt Duck Farm in June 2019. Photo: Courtesy Direct Action Everywhere

The conspiracy charges against DxE’s Wayne Hsiung marked a troubling shift — and an overreach — by prosecutors in animal rights cases

ANIMAL RIGHTS ACTIVIST and lawyer Wayne Hsiung was found guilty of felony conspiracy and two misdemeanor charges on Thursday for rescuing ailing animals from factory farms in Sonoma County, California.

Hsiung and fellow activists with the animal liberation group he founded, Direct Action Everywhere, or DxE, have for years engaged in the public removal of sick and injured animals from farming facilities — a tactic known as “open rescue,” since they are publicized. The rescues regularly lead to criminal charges, which for the most part have been dropped or led to acquittals in court. Hsiung’s conviction marks the first time a DxE open rescue case has ended with an activist’s incarceration: He faces up to three years in prison.

“I could be going to jail for organizing others and trying to take sick and injured animals to the vet,” Hsiung said in a video posted on social media the day before his conviction. “That’s all I did.”

Following the guilty verdict, Hsiung was indeed put in jail, where he awaits his November 30 sentencing hearing.

After several trials of dropped charges and not-guilty verdicts for DxE open rescues, Hsiung’s felony charges suggest a shift in tactics by the authorities — and a troubling prosecutorial overreach. Past cases against DxE activists had often involved theft or burglary charges based on allegedly stolen animal property. Hsiung was convicted of felony conspiracy to commit misdemeanor trespass; the punishment for planning to trespass in this case is far heftier than for the trespassing itself.

Cassie King, an organizer with DxE, told The Intercept that, a week before Hsiung’s trial began, the government dropped theft and burglary charges, while pushing forward with felony conspiracy and trespassing.

“The prosecutor was very strategic. I’m sure he’d followed what happened in other cases that led to acquittal.”

“The prosecutor was very strategic,” said King, who has faced charges for open rescues. “I’m sure he’d followed what happened in other cases that led to acquittal.”

Hsiung’s charges stem from DxE mass actions in Sonoma County at two poultry farms: one at Sunrise Farms in 2018, one at Reichardt Duck Farm in 2019. Prior investigations by DxE and other animal welfare organizations had found rampant violations of animal cruelty law at the facilities, prompting the open-rescue plan. At both locations, over 500 activists demonstrated outside, while a smaller number entered the properties to identify and remove dozens of sick and injured animals, which were then brought to a vet.

Hsiung was convicted on misdemeanor trespass for both events; his felony conspiracy conviction relates only to the Sunrise Farms action, for which he was a lead organizer. The jury could not decide on a similar felony conspiracy charge for Reichardt Duck Farm rescue, leading to a mistrial on that charge.

While hundreds of demonstrators were initially arrested, many faced misdemeanor charges and chose to enter diversion programs to see the charges removed; six people were charged with felonies, four of whom took plea deals, while one person’s charges were dropped. Hsiung was the only remaining defendant.

Prosecutorial Overreach

The practice of open rescue is an end in itself — saving individual, suffering animals — but the broader aim is to bring attention to the brutalities of factory farming, especially farms that brand themselves as cruelty free. Sunrise Farms, for example, is a major egg supplier to Whole Foods.

Hsiung and others welcomed the opportunity to bring their cases to trial, with the aim of shifting legal precedent around animal cruelty and the rights of nonhuman animals in the legal system.

In a number of recent cases, DxE activists have been successful: Juries in St. George, Utah, and Merced, California, found open-rescue participants not guilty. Hsiung was a defendant in the Utah case and, in his capacity as an attorney, led the legal defense in the Merced case. Other activists had charges dropped in various jurisdictions.

In 2021, Hsiung was convicted of larceny and breaking and entering for his rescue of an ill baby goat from a North Carolina farm but was given a six-to-17 month suspended sentence, a year’s probation, and no prison time. His conviction and expected prison sentence this time marks a potentially troubling shift in prosecutorial approaches to these cases.

In both the Utah and California acquittals, the activists faced theft or burglary charges — for taking animals that the farming corporations considered property. Since the rescued animals were sick or injured, however, the defendants were able to show that the animals had no value, as understood by agribusiness; their removal could not be shown to be a loss of value to the company. Prosecutors in the Sonoma County trial avoided the question of theft and property all together, relying instead on trespassing charges, which were then trumped up with a vague felony conspiracy statute.

Hsiung’s defense was in many ways stymied from the jump. The judge barred almost all photo and video evidence of animal cruelty from the trial, as has been the case in a number of previous DxE trials. As I’ve previously noted, the decision to disallow such evidence is usually made to benefit a defendant — not showing gruesome images of a murder victim, for example. Such logic has been flipped in DxE cases, including Hsiung’s most recent, to the benefit of powerful agribusiness.

Meanwhile, the judge also barred Hsiung from making a so-called necessity defense, based on the right to aid animals who were being subjected to criminal animal cruelty. DxE has long hoped to bring a necessity defense in court. The activists argue that the legal justification that allows a person to break into a car to save a suffocating dog should apply in open rescue cases; the logic is the same, and the only difference lies in the power of the agriculture industry.

“Judge Laura Passaglia prohibited the defense from showing the jury photo and video evidence of animal cruelty.”

Judge Laura Passaglia denied Hsiung’s use of a necessity defense but did permit him to make a “mistake of law” defense: the argument that the defendant had a good faith belief that their actions were legal. Under California’s animal cruelty statute, a person is permitted to trespass onto private property to aid ailing animals. Hsiung claimed that he believed DxE’s actions to be legal, as extensive research had provided evidence that animal suffering and illness was rife at both farm facilities. Since almost all video and photo evidence of animal cruelty was banned from the trial, however, the defense was kneecapped.

“Throughout the trial, Hsiung encountered numerous judicial obstacles, including a gag order barring him from speaking with the media about the case,” said a statement from DxE, adding that the judge did not respond to the American Civil Liberties Union’s argument that the order violated Hsiung’s First Amendment rights. “Although prosecution witnesses repeatedly testified that the treatment of the animals at their facilities is humane, Judge Passaglia prohibited the defense from showing the jury photo and video evidence of animal cruelty that disproved these testimonies, except on a few limited occasions for direct impeachment.”

Hsiung plans to appeal, citing what he believes were prejudicial rulings and significant error on the part of the judge. The animal liberation movement is hopeful too that an appeal provides another opportunity to raise a necessity defense and fundamentally change case law around animal welfare.

“Activists have won and will continue to win cases based on a legal right to rescue animals from abuse,” said University of Denver law professor and civil rights attorney Justin Marceau. “No legal strategy ever works 100 percent of the time, but this conviction is less a setback than an opportunity to litigate the legal status of animals in the appellate court and in the court of public opinion.”

Regards Mark

Animal Rights Activist Convicted of Felony for Rescuing Sick Chickens (theintercept.com)

Scotland: East Lothian crime: Animal rights protestor claims she was hit by car during silent protest.

East Lothian crime: Animal rights protestor claims she was hit by car during silent protest (msn.com)

An animal rights protestor claims she had to be taken to hospital after being struck by a car while demonstrating outside a medical research facility.

Rachel Campbell was part of a silent protest when she said she was hit by an employee’s vehicle outside the controversial Charles River Laboratories near Tranent, East Lothian. Rachel was taking part in the demo with the activist group East Lothian Uncaged who were protesting against the use of animals at the facility on Tuesday afternoon.

The group is speaking out against animal testing carried out at the medical research facility, a process Charles River previously said was “a vital component” of research studies.

The 28-year-old protestor, from Glasgow, spoke to the East Lothian Courier slamming the incident saying she had to be taken to hospital in Paisley for treatment to injuries to her legs and back.

Rachel, who works as a carer, said: “I was just standing there with my sign. I was just so shocked, I didn’t see it coming. He hit my legs and I felt myself forced back. It didn’t knock me over but I managed to get out of the way. I think if I hadn’t been able to move he’d have knocked me down.

“He just drove off and I was in pain. We called the police and I went to A&E when I got home.” And in a Facebook update she added: “Thank you so much to everyone for your kind words, sending lots of love, we will keep fighting even harder. I might not be tougher than a mad man’s bumper, but one thing for sure is our spirit is not damaged.”

A spokesperson for East Lothian Uncaged posted: “Today we did a silent, peaceful protest outside Charles River Laboratories in Tranent in Scotland. At 5.05pm an employee driving a blue Vauxhall Mokka left the premises. He stopped his car a foot in front of one of our team, revved his engine loudly, then drove straight into her.

“Our team member has injuries to her legs and back and is on her way to A&E to be checked over. Thankfully her injuries are not so serious that she needed an ambulance. The incident has been reported to the police and our team member will press charges.

“Plenty of other cars drove out this afternoon without coming close to hitting any of our team, as we made sure we weren’t obstructing their exit. There is a Charles River security camera directly opposite which will have filmed the incident. Please share this everywhere so the world knows the kind of sick and twisted people Charles River employs.”

Police Scotland spokesperson said: “Around 5.30pm on Tuesday, October 31, a report was made to police that a woman had been struck by a car in the area earlier in the day. Enquiries are at a very early stage.”

A Charles River Laboratories spokesperson said: “We are aware of an incident outside our facility on Tuesday, October 31. We recognise the right of individuals to freely, and safely, assemble and protest, and we have been in contact with local law enforcement and will cooperate with any requests they make.

“The work we do at our Edinburgh site is critically important to human health. Before the safety of a drug can be evaluated on humans, global regulatory agencies require animal research to ensure patient safety. Animal research is fundamental to understanding how to prevent and treat emerging infectious diseases, including the successful development of every COVID-19 vaccine, as well as treatments for cancer, diabetes, and a myriad of rare diseases. 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 is committed to animal welfare and exceeding international standards for care. We are also committed to replacing and reducing the number of animals used. We also partner with other companies to develop study designs that adopt this philosophy, known as the 3Rs,including the use of in vitro studies accepted by international authorities. As animal caregivers and scientific researchers, we are responsible to our clients and the public for the health and well-being of the animals in our care, and we strive to fulfill that responsibility while protecting patient safety on a daily basis.”

East Lothian crime: Animal rights protestor claims she was hit by car during silent protest (msn.com)

Regards Mark

England – London 1605: The Last Man To Enter Parliament With Honest Intentions – 5/11/1605.

England 1605 -The last man to enter Parliament with honest intentions

England: 1605 – The Last Man To Enter Parliament With Honest Intentions. As the English say – “Remember, Remember, the 5th of November – a Gunpowder Treason and Plot; There is no Reason why Gunpowder Treason Should Ever Be Forgot”. – World Animals Voice

The best of plots always start in a pub !

This weekend, many areas up and down the UK; but especially in England; will celebrate Guy Fawkes night by having big firework and bonfire displays.  It is a special event celebrated by the English only for centuries – 1605 onward really.

Enjoy the videos explaining why November 5th is a very special night for us.

London, November 5th 1605 – the gunpowder plot.

How very true – judging by the ‘lot’ we have supposedly representing us in Parliament today, Guy Fawkes is often toasted as:

England: 1604 – The Last Man To Enter Parliament With Honest Intentions.

Many would say that sadly it all went wrong; and that English history changed as a result.

As the English say – “remember, remember, the 5th of November – a gunpowder treason and plot; there is no reason why gunpowder treason should ever be forgot”.

Why ? – to celebrate the ‘Gunpowder plot’ –  or ‘Guy Fawkes night’.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunpowder_Plot

The Gunpowder Plot of 1605, in earlier centuries often called the Gunpowder Treason Plot or the Jesuit Treason, was a failed assassination attempt against King James I of England and VI of Scotland by a group of provincial English Catholics led by Robert Catesby.

The plan was to blow up the House of Lords during the State Opening of England’s Parliament on 5 November 1605, as the prelude to a popular revolt in the Midlands during which James’s nine-year-old daughter, Princess Elizabeth, was to be installed as the Catholic head of state.

Guy Fawkes, who had 10 years of military experience fighting in the Spanish Netherlands in suppression of the Dutch Revolt, was given charge of the explosives.

Regards Mark

Ukraine: Humane management of cat and dog populations.

3 November 2023

Four Paws

In the early days of the war in 2022, Eurogroup for Animals and its members reached out to other organisations working in Ukraine to set up a Task Force for companion animals in this country.

The initial objective of the Task Force was to identify what was needed in order to ensure welfare of companion animals overthere, and to increase information sharing between the international NGOs working in Ukraine. 

The Task Force members have a long history of helping animals in Ukraine: FOUR PAWS has been present on the ground since 2012, Deutscher Tierschutzbund e.V. has been working in Odesa since 2000, Naturewatch Foundation since 1994. Others, such as GGI and Save the Dogs and other animals, have been present since the very first days of Russia’s full-scale war in Ukraine.

We strive for systemic changes for animals in Ukraine and we are here to help in the long run. That also holds true during the war and the difficulties, which come with it”

Luca Secker, Scientific Officer for Companion Animals, Deutscher Tierschutzbund

The Task Force members have put in place many programmes to help alleviate the suffering of cats and dogs as a result of prolonged warfare. However, they agree that some of the solutions should focus on systemic change in Ukraine, rather than ad hoc responses to current problems. Cat and dog humane population management is one of the major tasks requiring systemic change because as long as people own dogs and cats, there will always be a need to manage their populations

The members identified three areas, on which population management in Ukraine should focus: 

Supporting the identification and registration of cats and dogs in Ukraine.

Supporting evidence-based cat and dog sterilisation programmes for owned and unowned animals.

Advising on minimum standards for shelters.

To find out more about our vision, read our opinion on cat and dog population management in Ukraine (also available in Ukrainian). The Task Force details in this document what could be done now by all the stakeholders to achieve better welfare for cats and dogs in Ukraine.

The approach requires the close involvement of the competent authorities, veterinary professionals and paraprofessionals to ensure the highest level of animal health, and welfare and to minimise risks to public health. 

If you would like to find out more about the Task Force or to join our work, reach out at uataskforce@eurogroupforanimals.org

File

Joint opinion on cat and dog population management in Ukraine (English version)1.51 MB

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Joint opinion on cat and dog population management in Ukraine (Ukrainian version)1.55 MB

Regards Mark

TIME OUT – Coldplay – Fix You (Live In São Paulo)

ABOUT COLDPLAY Since forming at university in London, Coldplay have gone on to become one of the planet’s most popular acts, selling more than 100 million copies of their nine Number One albums, which have spawned a string of hits including Yellow, Clocks, Fix You, Paradise, Viva La Vida, A Sky Full Of Stars, Hymn For The Weekend, Adventure Of A Lifetime, Orphans and, most recently, Higher Power and My Univers

Canada: More Ag Gag.

https://www.lawtimesnews.com/news/general/animal-rights-activists-in-ontario-superior-court-for-canadas-first-ever-challenge-of-ag-gag-law/381026

Camille Labchuk, Animal Justice

Regards Mark

Hannah Arendt – “The death of human empathy is one of the first and most revealing signs of a culture that is about to fall into barbarity.

Time Out

Rod Stewart & Ron Wood (Rolling Stones) – Mandolin Wind.

England: A farmer allegedly told locals “I’ll do what I want” when he was confronted for dragging his dog behind his car before leaving her to die.

A farmer allegedly told locals “I’ll do what I want” when he was confronted for dragging his dog behind his car before leaving her to die.

Kim Norman Rendall, from Somerset, is facing jail after he was filmed pulling his white husky Daisy with a rope for around 200 metres. The cruel act was witnessed by several motorists who tried to stop the 65 year old by honking and flashing their lights at his red Nissan Micra, Daisy was left severely injured from the incident on the afternoon of April 17, and sadly had to be put down as she couldn’t recover.

Farmer’s cruel remark when locals confronted him for dragging his dog behind car (msn.com)

Despite this, Rendall refused to seek help for his injured dog or tell the police where he had left her when they arrived at his home, where he was found having a cup of tea and a haircut. After the case, the RSPCA released a shocking video showing Daisy being dragged along the road in Timsbury, near Bath. North Somerset Magistrates’ Court heard how one motorist shouted “dog, dog” out of a window, leading a woman to flag the car down.

Rendall stopped and was immediately confronted by upset locals as Daisy bled onto the road and tried to stand up, reports Somerset Live. One woman offered to take Daisy to the vet for urgent care if he wasn’t going to. He laughed and said: “I’ll do what I want, it’s my dog.” Lundi Meyer, prosecuting, said he drove for about 200 metres, and around 55 seconds. After removing a bin from his car, he put Daisy in the boot and drove off. The police were called and officers arrived at his mum’s house within an hour.

Hard watch but see this bastard dragging Daisy the dog via this link – Mark:

Farmer’s cruel remark when locals confronted him for dragging his dog behind car (msn.com)

The farmer was found there having a cup of tea and a haircut. He wouldn’t tell the police where Daisy was and said he would take her to the vet himself. Because of the urgency, he was arrested on suspicion of animal cruelty. In response, he said: “I don’t like this at all, I don’t like this at f**king all”. In custody, it was noted that his trainers were covered in blood. He was rude and aggressive towards the officers.

Meanwhile, 18 police officers and a drone unit were looking for Daisy to get her the urgent treatment she needed. After a two and a half hour search in the Somerset countryside, she was found in a cow barn in Gossard Lane, High Littleton. She was rushed to Rosemary Lodge Veterinary Hospital in Bath in a police car with blue lights and sirens. The vets said she had serious injuries, including both back legs suffering full-thickness skin loss and an open fracture of her foot.

Despite the best efforts of vets to treat Daisy, her pain could not be controlled and she was put to sleep nine days later. Ms Meyer said the incident has “clearly has had a lasting affect on people”, including witnesses and police officers. It was heard how one witness “fell to the floor and went into shock” following the incident and was prescribed Diazepam by her GP due to being unable to sleep.

PC Natalie Cosgrove described Daisy’s injuries as “the worst thing I have ever seen” and it made her “feel physically sick”. “I felt shocked, I couldn’t sleep and I cried… I hugged my own dog crying in sympathy for Daisy”, she told the court in a victim person statement. She said that the dog’s suffering was “something that cannot be described” and said she was “traumatised” when Rendall smirked in his police interview. PC Cosgrove added: “I just felt incredibly sorry for her, that a human let her down so badly. This is one of those jobs that will haunt me forever.”

Ms Meyer told the magistrates that Rendall’s refusal to provide Daisy’s whereabouts was “sadistic” and only prolonged her suffering. She added: “He prioritised a haircut and a cup of tea over her medical attention”. At a previous hearing, Rendall pleaded guilty to two counts of causing the unnecessary suffering of an animal contrary to the Animal Welfare Act. Suggesting the starting point was two years in prison for his crimes, the magistrates agreed that their powers were likely to be insufficient, and sent the case to Bristol Crown Court for sentencing.

He was released on unconditional bail to appear on November 21.

Regards Mark

England: Note Date – London, Viva ! COP Demo On 25/11/23.

Dear Mark,

Viva! is demanding that the Government includes a shift to plant-based diets in their climate commitments. Take action with us ahead of COP28 by joining our London demonstration on the 25 November 2023.  

COP is a key point in the environment calendar, marking the annual United Nations Climate Change Conference where world leaders come together to discuss the supposed ‘solutions’ to tackling the climate crisis and its impacts. Demand for meat, dairy, fish and eggs is the number one driver of wildlife loss, is fuelling the climate crisis, and threatening humanity’s own existence. Yet given the devastating impact it has on the planet, there is no mention of dietary change in the UK Government’s environment and climate strategy. 

Our leaders are governing the death of humanity. Without a healthy planet, we have no future.  We need to take a stand against climate inaction, and we need you to join us this 25 November.  
Join Viva!’s demonstration at Parliament Square 
Where: Parliament Square, London When: 25 November 2023, 11am to 2pm

We’ll be bringing lots of placards to explain why we need to include the impacts of meat and dairy in environmental commitments. There will be plenty to hand around if you need one or bring your own!  This is a collaborative event where we will be joined by other groups to amplify this unified message. We will have speeches throughout the day. 

Our action on Parliament Square is just the beginning – we want to support you in taking action in your local area.  

COP28 will be a key event in the environment calendar, with rallies and demos across the country; allowing people to have their voices heard about the need for climate action now.  

COP28 is being held 30 November to 12 December 2023. Take action in your local area as part of a local COP28 rally or hold your own event or stall. 

At Viva! we will be updating our website regularly with details of national events. However, if there isn’t one already set up near you, why not hold your own outreach event or demo instead? Keep us updated on your climate action plans.

Click here to order your free climate demo pack –  https://viva.org.uk/planet/campaigns/cop28/?mc_cid=b61cb0cfc9&mc_eid=f1cc978ae5#pack

Regards Viva and Mark

Canada: Over 100 Animal Advocates Gather Outside Courthouse In Support Of Lawsuit Against ‘Ag Gag’ Law,

Over 100 animal rights advocates gathered outside a Toronto courthouse Monday to voice support for a lawsuit filed by Animal Justice against the so-called “Ag-Gag Law.”

The law prohibits animal rights activists and journalists from conducting undercover investigations and filming animal cruelty at farms and slaughterhouses. Animal rights advocates argue the Security From Trespass and Animal Safety Act, as it is formally called, violates the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Arguments in the case began Monday in Ontario Superior Court.

“Undercover exposés inside farms and slaughterhouses are one of the only sources of information that the public has regarding how animals are treated on farms,” said Camille Labchuk, a lawyer and the executive director of Animal Justice, explaining why the group went to court. “There is no transparency about what happens behind closed doors.”

https://aldf.org/article/where-are-they-now-camille-labchuk/

Camille Labchuk, a lawyer and the executive director of Animal Justice, outside the Ontario Superior Court on Monday, Oct. 30, 2023. Photo by: Abdul Matin Sarfraz

Continue reading at  Animal rights activists go to court to strike down ‘Ag-Gag Law’ | Canada’s National Observer: News & Analysis

Regards Mark