December 23, 2012

Animal Activists Release 72 Beagles From Spanish Lab

Seventy-two beagles raised in a Spanish laboratory have been rescued by the Beagle Freedom Project.

The beagles, all between ages 4 and 7, had lived in cages their entire lives, spokesman Gary Smith told the NBC.

“We’ve been told they lived one per cage in rooms of 10 beagles, but they never had any physical interaction with one another,” said Smith.

“They’ve been in kennels since they were rescued about a week ago, but aside from that, they’ve spent most of their lives locked up.”

Beagles are used in university and other research facilities to test medical and pharmaceutical products, household products and cosmetics.

When the beagles are no longer wanted for research purposes, some labs attempt to find homes for adoptable, healthy beagles.

The Beagle Freedom Project works with the laboratories to remove and transport beagles to their new homes.

All of the Beagle Freedom Project’s rescues are carried out legally with the cooperation of the facility.

Source:

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10769704

Save Fukushima Animals - Please Sign The Attached Petition

Many rescuers from Fukushima will tell you the same thing.

There were dogs running after cars, running after people, begging, for their turn for rescue. Heartbroken rescuers, leaving an abundance of food and water behind, because there was no room, the cars and vans were over capacity with animals, telling them to hang on, they will be back for them.

  • No rescuer thought that the Government of Japan was going to shut down the zone.
  • No rescuer thought the roads would be barricaded and they would have to get creative going into the zone.
  • No rescuer thought, ever, they were leaving animals to die.
  • Nobody saw this coming.

Picture from the Hoshi Family. A dog desperately trying to get into the car, wanting it to be his turn, before they even opened the door, because he knew, if he wasnt rescued soon, he would die.

Please sign the petition: https://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/save-fukushima-animals/

Source: https://www.facebook.com/DefenceAgainstAnimalCruelty

Abattoir Shut Amid Animal Cruelty Claims

A GIPPSLAND abattoir has been shut by state authorities following a shocking video of alleged animal cruelty.

PrimeSafe ordered the immediate closure of LE Giles abattoir in Trafalgar after a video of the alleged cruelty to pigs being processed in the facility was provided to them by Animals Australia.

It is understood the video shows abattoir workers sticking electric stun prods used to stun animals before they are slaughtered into the eyes and noses of the animals.

PrimeSafe chief executive Brian Casey told the Herald Sun it was his intention to close the abattoir permanently

“I am appalled by the treatment of animals shown in the video footage,” he said.

The issue will be vigorously pursued by PrimeSafe, ensuring that any inhumane treatment of animals is eradicated.

I have advised the abattoir owners that it is my intention, immediately the investigation is concluded, to take action with a view to cancelling their PrimeSafe licence.

Mr Casey said the order to cease operations was indefinite and would continue for as long as it takes for PrimeSafe to fully investigate all the matters raised in the video.

“Giles Abattoir is currently not permitted to slaughter livestock and so there is no on-going risk posed to the welfare of livestock at the facility, nor to public health,” he said.

Mr Casey said PrimeSafe was responsible for enforcing animal welfare standards in abattoirs and the Department of Primary Industries would be undertaking a separate investigation into whether animal cruelty laws had been breached.

Animals Australia executive director Glenys Oogjes said people would be shocked by the cruelty but refused to release the video to the Herald Sun saying they had already made a deal to give it to another media outlet.

“I think we would expect this sort of thing only to happen in abittors overseas so it’s distressing that it’s happening in Australia,” she said.

Ms Oogies said the video was shot by a person associated with Animal Liberation Victoria who filmed at the facility with the permission and knowledge of the management.

She said the video raised serious concerns about the auditing of abattoirs in Victoria.

All Victorian abattoirs are required to be licensed with PrimeSafe and to have a quality assurance program that complies with the Australian Standard for the Hygienic Production and Transportation of Meat and Meat Products for Human Consumption.

The closure comes a day after the Herald Sun highlighted animal cruelty at sales yards in Victoria.

Source: https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/breaking-news/abbattoir-shut-amid-animal-cruelty-claims/story-e6frea73-1226206424187

Live Sheep Exports. It’s Just Cruel.

This video shows evidence collected during WSPA’s recent investigation into the mistreatment of Australian sheep. Investigators have documented cruelty throughout the live export supply chain, from transportation on ships, through to holding yards and abattoirs in the Middle East.

You can take action to help end this cruel trade by visiting www.humanechain.org

Thank you for caring.

 

**Graphic** Australian Sheep Cruelty

Belo Monte Dam and Hunters Endanger Amazon Turtles

BAJO XINGÚ, Brazil, Nov 24, 2011 (Tierramérica) - Luiz Cardoso da Costa was horrified as he watched the Amazonian manatee, a large docile beast, bleeding out from the knife wound he had dealt it, yet greedily gulping down grasses as if eating could somehow stave off death.

He was not expecting such an agonisingly drawn-out death. And it led him to swear off the hunting of these aquatic mammals, also known as seacows, which can reach sizes of up to half a ton of meat, fat and hide, which fetch a high price on the black market.

He had decided to use a knife and aim for the animal’s heart, because the traditional method of killing Amazonian manatees (Trichechus inunguis) in Brazil seemed too cruel: sticking rods into their nostrils so that they die of asphyxiation.

But what provoked Da Costa, formerly a “great predator”, to give up all forms of hunting forever was witnessing some 800 turtles being loaded onto a boat destined for Manaus, the central metropolis of the Amazon region, in northwestern Brazil. On that particular occasion, 13 years ago, he himself had sold “only around 20″ of those 800, but the sight of such a huge number of dead turtles together shook him to the core.

His conversion was dramatic. Today he is the heart and soul of environmental protection in Tabuleiro do Embaubal, a group of more than 100 islands in the final stretch of the Xingú River, in the eastern Amazon, whose beaches are the principal known remaining breeding grounds of Amazon turtles.

Thousands of females gather here in September and October, especially on the beach in Juncal. They dig holes in the sand to serve as nests, lay their eggs, cover them up with sand, and then return to the river.

The spectacle of sand flying through the air as multitudes of large turtles dig their nests and lay their eggs could be a major tourist attraction some day, believes Saloma Mendes de Oliveira, secretary of the environment in the municipality of Senador José Porfírio, which includes the Tabuleiro do Embaubal archipelago. As well as a source of revenues, this would also promote the commitment of local communities to the preservation of nature, she added.

For now, the large gatherings of turtles makes them especially vulnerable to hunters, who continue to take advantage of the high prices for turtle meat and eggs, despite the fact that their capture is an environmental crime punished with heavy fines and even prison sentences in some cases.

This is why efforts are being stepped up to monitor the beaches during the “summer” or low-water period between June and November. Since September, Da Costa has been jointed by another 20 rangers.

These are people hired by a company called Biota, created through an agreement between the municipal government of Senador José Porfírio and Norte Energia, the consortium awarded the contract to build the Belo Monte hydroelectric power plant. Norte Energia is responsible for monitoring and mitigating the impacts of the two dams it will build as part of the project.

A good deal of controversy surrounds the potential effects of this energy mega project in the Amazon region, whose total capacity of 11,233 megawatts will be limited to 40 percent effective capacity, on average, due to the sharp variation in the flow of the Xingú River.

Norte Energia “hasn’t explained anything to us,” said Da Costa. His fear is that the river’s water levels will drop, leading to drier “winters” or high-water periods on the Embaubal islands. If the wetlands that are usually flooded during the high-water period dry up as a consequence, this would deprive the turtles of their source of plant food, which means they would be thinner and lay fewer eggs, he explained.

However, this scenario is unlikely, according to Juarez Pezzuti, a biologist from the Federal University of Pará who is coordinating studies of reptiles in the Xingú River basin.

The flow of the Lower Xingú, the 220-km stretch of the Xingú River between Belo Monte and its mouth, is determined by the Amazon River, which receives its waters along with those of the more than 1,000 rivers in the Amazon Basin.

The Amazon River, vastly larger and faster flowing than its tributary, operates as a barrier to draining. This is why the water level of the Xingú would only drop lower than normal if the same thing happened in the Amazon River. In addition, both rivers are influenced by the tides of the Atlantic Ocean, despite the fact that it is 400 km away.

This is exactly what worries Oliveira: that the slower-flowing waters of the Lower Xingú “will become more acidic” by accumulating more decomposed organic matter, “affecting more susceptible species and reducing local biodiversity.”

Norte Energia denies the possibility of such an impact, but its conclusions are not based on any serious foundations, she maintained.

The consortium only recognises an “indirect influence” of the Belo Monte project on areas that will not be flooded, but they will suffer equally serious damage as the Volta Grande, the rocky 100-km stretch of river whose waters will be partially diverted to feed one of the Belo Monte dams, said Oliveira.

The dam will retain sediments that are needed to maintain the beaches of the Embaubal islands, whose height is crucial for the successful reproduction of Amazon turtles and other species, noted Pezzuti.

The greatest losses of eggs before they are hatched are due to increases in the river’s water level caused by unusually strong rains.

But these are unpredictable and uncontrollable enemies for rangers like Da Costa, who is responsible for preventing human and natural predators from endangering the fauna of the Tabuleiro do Embaubal.

Peasant farmer Manoel Nader witnessed the turtles laying their eggs on the beaches of Embaubal when he joined the group of rangers. “It was incredibly moving. I had never had the chance to see it before,” he said, despite having lived almost all of his 48 years in the municipality.

But Nader confesses that, like a number of his colleagues, he had “fished” a few turtles in the past, for his own consumption, despite the prohibition. Now, however, he is committed to his mission to protect them. Besides, he added, “I prefer beef.”

The main problem is not the local fishermen, who are known and unarmed, capture only a small number of animals to eat themselves, and could be persuaded to stop, said Da Costa. The real threat is posed by traders “from outside” who supply turtles to big cities like Manaus and Belém. The only way to stop them is through police enforcement, he stressed.

The rangers in Embaubal are civilians, employed by Biota or the municipal government, like Da Costa, and have no law enforcement powers. The Brazilian Environmental Institute (IBAMA), which has this authority, transferred its responsibilities in the archipelago to a private foundation, which gave up the work two and a half years ago.

This left Da Costa as a solitary defender of Embaubal, often without the boats or fuel needed to travel among the islands, and sometimes a powerless witness to the capture of huge numbers of turtles.

He has devoted ten of his 47 years to his mission of protecting the turtles. He lives in the “Base”, a large wooden house with an observation post that allows him to monitor Juncal beach, 600 meters away, during the daylight hours. He only rarely visits his family, a wife and six children who live in the city. He earns very little and has received numerous death threats. But he feels gratified.

*The writer is an IPS correspondent. This story was originally published by Latin American newspapers that are part of the Tierramérica network. Tierramérica is a specialised news service produced by IPS with the backing of the United Nations Development Programme, United Nations Environment Programme and the World Bank.

 

Source: https://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=105955

**Graphic** Meet Your Meat - The Transformation Of Animals Into Food

Life on the farm isn’t what it used to be.

The green pastures and idyllic barnyard scenes portrayed in children’s books have been replaced by windowless sheds, tiny crates, wire cages, and other confinement systems integral to what is now known as “factory farming.”

Today the majority of farmed animals are:

  • -confined to the point that they can barely move,
  • -denied veterinary care,
  • -mutilated without painkillers,
  • -and finally slaughtered — often while fully conscious.

Fortunately, each one of us has the power to help end this suffering by simply choosing to eat vegetarian.

 

Electronic Contact Lens Displays Pixels On The Eyes

The future of augmented-reality technology is here - as long as you’re a rabbit. Bioengineers have placed the first contact lenses containing electronic displays into the eyes of rabbits as a first step on the way to proving they are safe for humans. The bunnies suffered no ill effects, the researchers say.

The first version may only have one pixel, but higher resolution lens displays - like those seen in Terminator - could one day be used as satnav enhancers showing you directional arrows for example, or flash up texts and emails - perhaps even video. In the shorter term, the breakthrough also means people suffering from conditions like diabetes and glaucoma may find they have a novel way to monitor their conditions.

In February, New Scientist revealed the litany of research projects underway in the field of contact lens enhancement. While one company has fielded a contact lens technology using a surface-mounted strain gauge to assess glaucoma risk, none have built in a display, or the lenses needed for focused projection onto the retina - and then tested it in vivo. They have now.

“We have demonstrated the operation of a contact lens display powered by a remote radiofrequency transmitter in free space and on a live rabbit,” says a US and Finnish team led by Babak Praviz of the University of Washington in Seattle.

“This verifies that antennas, radio chips, control circuitry, and micrometre-scale light sources can be integrated into a contact lens and operated on live eyes.”

The test lens was powered remotely using a 5-millimetre-long antenna printed on the lens to receive gigahertz-range radio-frequency energy from a transmitter placed ten centimetres from the rabbit’s eye. To focus the light on the rabbit’s retina, the contact lens itself was fabricated as a Fresnel lens - in which a series of concentric annular sections is used to generate the ultrashort focal length needed.

They found their lens LED glowed brightly up to a metre away from the radio source in free space, but needed to be 2 centimetres away when the lens was placed in a rabbit’s eye and the wireless reception was affected by body fluids. All the 40-minute-long tests on live rabbits were performed under general anaesthetic and showed that the display worked well - and fluroescence tests showed no damage or abrasions to the rabbit’s eyes after the lenses were removed.

While making a higher resolution display is next on their agenda, there are uses for this small one, say the researchers: “A display with a single controllable pixel could be used in gaming, training, or giving warnings to the hearing impaired.”

“This is clearly way off in the future. But we’re aware of the research that is ongoing in this field and we’re watching the technology’s potential for biosensing and drug delivery applications in particular,” says a spokesperson for the British Contact Lens Association in London.

 

Source: https://www.newscientist.com/blogs/onepercent/2011/11/electronic-contact-lens-displa.html

USA - Gas Chambers To Kill Pets. Most Animal Shelters Have Them.

If gas chambers were so “humane” then why was this practice banned for the worst serial killers in America?

But it is “okay” to do it to innocent Animals. These cats & dogs suffer horrendous terror - losing bowel & bladder control due to fear, often drowning in their own vomit.

Contrary to popular belief, it is slow, AGONISING and not “humane”.

 

 

 

The People’s Charter to Create a Nonviolent World

The People’s Charter to Create a Nonviolent World was launched simultaneously on 11 November 2011 at several locations around the world.
Please sign and share widely. Thank you for your compassion and support.

The aim of this Charter is to create a worldwide movement to end violence in all its forms. The People’s Charter will give voice to the millions of ordinary people around the world who want an end to war, oppression, environmental destruction and violence of all kinds. We hope that this Charter will support and unite the courageous nonviolent struggles of ordinary people all over the world.

As you will see, The People’s Charter describes very thoroughly the major forms of violence in the world. It also presents a strategy to end this violence.

We can each play a part in stopping violence and in creating a peaceful and just world. Some of us will focus on reducing our consumption, some of us will parent our children in a way that fosters children’s safety and empowerment, some of us will use nonviolent resistance in the face of military violence. Everyone’s contribution is important and needed. We hope this Charter will be a springboard for us all to take steps to create a peaceful and just world, however small and humble these steps may be. By listening to the deep truth of ourselves, each other and the Earth, each one of us can find our own unique way to help create this nonviolent world.

Why did we choose 11 November as the date to launch The People’s Charter?

‘When I was a boy … all the people of all the nations which fought in the First World War were silent during the eleventh minute of the eleventh hour of Armistice Day, which was the eleventh day of the eleventh month. It was at that minute in nineteen-hundred and eighteen, that millions upon millions of human beings stopped butchering one another. I have talked to old men who were on battlefields at that minute. They have told me in one way or another that the sudden silence was the Voice of God. So we still have among us some men who can remember when God spoke clearly to mankind.’
(Kurt Vonnegut Jr., an atheist humanist, in his novel Breakfast of Champions.

Organisation

So far, the organising groups in various locations have organised launch events in their localities around the world. Some groups are organising follow-up events so that other people have the chance to become involved in local, personal networks.

See ‘Future Events’ for information about the next public event nearest you.

Signing the Charter

The People’s Charter can be read and signed online: click on ‘Read Charter’ or ‘Sign Charter’ in the sidebar.

 

‘A small body of determined spirits fired by an unquenchable faith in their mission can alter the course of history.’ Mohandas K. Gandhi

 

Source: https://thepeoplesnonviolencecharter.wordpress.com/