The Urgent Need for
a Permanent Ban on Mulesing and Live Sheep Exports in the Australian
Wool Industry Based on Animal Welfare Concerns
Australia is home to the world’s largest population of merino
sheep, producing more than 50 percent of the world’s merino
wool supply (Australian Bureau of Statistics 2003). Any wool labeled
merino has thus quite likely come from Australian sheep, who suffer
immeasurably both during and after the wool-production process.
Recent scientific publications, investigative footage, and news
reports from Australia reveal the horrors of inhumane industry practices
such as mulesing, as well as the cruelty involved in live exports,
which claim more than 6 million sheep per year and largely depend
on the wool industry. The many abuses that these practices entail
cause intense suffering and should be eliminated.
The Mulesing Mutilation
Mulesing is practiced primarily on merino lambs and involves the
stripping away of large areas of skin and flesh from sheep’s
hindquarters so as to prevent the growth of wool. It is performed
as a preventive measure against a painful condition called “flystrike,”
which occurs when the eggs of blowflies laid in woolly areas of
sheep’s skin hatch into maggots, leading to infestation and,
eventually, death by ammonia poisoning. Blowflies are especially
prone to laying their eggs in the breech area of merino sheep because
the many folds of skin that characterize this breed tend to accumulate
moisture, feces, and urine, especially when covered with wool. Mulesing
is highly abusive, causing both acute and chronic pain, and unjustifiable,
especially given the availability of more humane flystrike-prevention
alternatives.
During mulesing, lambs are thrown onto their backs and their legs
are restrained while the skin and wool around their backsides is
carved away with metal shears to expose the flesh. At the same time,
their tails are often cut off. The procedure is tantamount to partially
skinning the animals alive without anesthetics. The resulting bloody
wounds have been found to remain unhealed for 22 to 30 days (Fell
and Shutt 1989, Chapman et al. 1994). It has been estimated that
approximately 60 to 80 percent of merino sheep are subjected to
mulesing in Australia (Beck
et al. 1985 in Counsell 2001,
Morley and Johnstone 1983 in Fell and Shutt 1989, Baillie 1979 in
Townend 1985, Australian Senate Select Committee on Animal Welfare
1989 in Pope 1997), statistics that suggest that at any given time,
Australia contains about 82 million mulesed sheep.
Physical Indicators of Stress From Mulesing
In its code of sheep-welfare recommendations, the New Zealand Ministry
of Agriculture and Forestry writes that mulesing “causes pain
both at the time it is carried out and during the healing process”
(MAF 1996, §7.1.3). Much scientific evidence shows that physiological
and behavioral indicators of stress in mulesed sheep are very high,
proving that mulesing is indeed extremely painful. In physiological
terms, the degree of stress is usually determined by measuring plasma
cortisol concentrations—“the most commonly used physiological
indicator of stress,” according to Chapman
et al.
(1994 p 243)—and ß-endorphin levels, both of which are
known to rise during times of stress.
Fell and Shutt (1988) measured both salivary and plasma cortisol
concentrations in a study of 63 merino crossbred lambs and found
that mulesing was the greatest acute stressor of all the procedures
to which sheep are typically subjected on farms, including castration,
docking, rough transport, pizzle dropping, tooth-grinding, and shearing.
Chapman
et al. (1994) discovered that, following mulesing,
plasma cortisol concentrations “increased immediately and
rapidly” and remained elevated for at least 48 hours (p 243).
Shutt
et al. (1987) studied 50 merino crossbred lambs and
found that mulesing and tail-docking could multiply mean plasma
ß-endorphin concentrations by 10. Fell and Shutt (1989) tested
mulesed merino wethers between five and 15 minutes following mutilation
and found signs of suffering in the form of “[m]arked elevation
of plasma cortisol and ß-endorphin” (p 283). The stress
associated with mulesing is so great that Jongman
et al.
(2000) found the EEG patterns of animals being mulesed to be similar
to those of animals who had been given injections of formalin in
the hoof to cause “acute pain and subsequent inflammation,
lameness, and associated chronic pain” (p 340).
Mulesing photos courtesy of Patty Mark /Animal Liberation Victoria
Behavioral Indicators of Stress From Mulesing
In their comprehensive, long-term study, Fell and Shutt (1989) found
that stress-related behavior in sheep continued for up to 113 days
following mulesing. Among other examples, mulesed sheep displayed
abnormal postures—most likely resulting from the painful mulesing
wound—for up to 48 hours following mutilation; “they
stood with head down, nose almost touching the ground, back arched,
and body hunched” (p 288). Chapman
et al. (1994)
verified these findings in their own study, reporting that “surgically
mulesed sheep quickly assumed a hunched-up posture” (p 246).
Normal daily behavior was also altered for up to 72 hours. As compared
to sheep in the control group, mulesed sheep did not engage in routine
feeding, lying, or grazing. Instead, they spent much of their time
standing idle, unable to engage in normal activities because of
the severe trauma that they had experienced. Researchers did not
observe
any of the mulesed animals lying or resting on
the day following mutilation or even drinking until the second day
following mutilation. Chapman
et al. (1994) further found
that mulesed sheep lost weight during the week following mutilation,
“moved about less frequently and over shorter distances than
the [control-group sheep] during the first eight days after treatment,”
and often simply stood still (pp 244-45).
Psychological Indicators of Stress From Mulesing
It has been shown that sheep are highly intelligent and able to
recognize human faces (Boivin
et al. 1997). Kendrick
et
al. (2001) found that sheep can even form mental images of
humans and remember—and distinguish among—50 different
sheep’s faces for more than two years, even if they haven’t
seen any of the faces during that time. This ability was discovered
by means of a test wherein sheep were shown 25 pairs of similar
sheep faces—some of them in profile—and taught to associate
certain faces with a food reward. When presented with the pairs
of faces and the potential for earning the reward, the sheep consistently
identified the correct faces. Analysis of their brain activity during
these exercises indicates that sheep use the very same areas of
the brain for visual recognition as humans do: “Sheep …
possess similar specialized neural systems in the temporal and frontal
lobes for assisting in this important social task, including a greater
involvement of the right brain hemisphere” (pp 165-66). The
researchers who conducted the test reportedly concluded that sheep
may be capable of emotion and conscious thought (Briggs 2001).
Such studies help explain the long-term emotional stress and psychological
aversion that sheep experience and display in the presence of handlers
who perform mulesing. Fell and Shutt (1989) conducted an “arena
test” in which mulesed sheep were placed in the same pen with
the handler who had performed the procedure on them. Aversion behavior
was measured in intervals and, while found to be most intense for
the first 37 days, continued to be noted for up to 113 days. While
“control animals turned and moved toward the handler …
mulesed animals turned and moved in the opposite direction in 95
% of all tests up to Day 37” (p 288). The pain of mulesing
is so intense that it leaves a lasting impression. Chapman
et
al. (1994) observed similar aversion during a 30-day post-mulesing
arena test and concluded that the sheep’s aversion to their
handler may be “a conditioned response to the association
of immediate pain [from mulesing] with … human handling”
(p 246).
Pathology Caused by Mulesing
Mulesing can also cause suffering by actually facilitating flystrike
in areas of blowfly activity—the very condition it is supposed
to prevent. The Agriculture and Resource Management Council of Australia
and New Zealand’s Animal Health Committee (ARMCANZ 1991) acknowledges
this problem when addressing the best management practices for sheep
and states, “After mulesing, lambs should be observed from
a distance … for signs of fly strike of the wound” (p
12). The New Zealand Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry also writes
that “there is a risk of infection and flystrike of the mulesing
wound itself” (MAF 1996, §7.1.3). Cook and Steiner (1990)
found that under conditions where blowflies were present, egg masses
were deposited into 93 percent of untreated wounds within 48 hours
and into 85 percent of all wounds, even those dressed with a blowfly-repellent
treatment, by the ninth day. They remarked that “[t]he overriding
finding of this trial has been that mulesing wounds are highly susceptible
to strike by L.
cuprina [the blowfly responsible for flystrike
in Australia] one week after mulesing, irrespective of whether the
wound ha[s] been chemically treated immediately after mulesing or
left untreated” (p 354). In another study, researchers from
the Western Australian Department of Agriculture (Harrington and
Steiner 1993) found that after mulesing, “95% of untreated
lambs were attractive to oviposition by
Lucilia cuprina
… and 90% subsequently developed flystrike within 4 [days]
of mulesing” (p 190). One-third of treated lambs were afflicted
as well. The authors conclude that “fresh mulesing wounds
can be attractive to L.
cuprina and susceptible to strike”
(p 191).
In its periodical
Surveillance, the New Zealand Ministry
of Agriculture and Forestry (MAF 2002) reports that mulesing is
believed to transmit a potentially deadly disease called eperythrozoonosis,
which can lead to recurrent anemia, bloody urine, and listlessness.
Eperythrozoonosis infections recur during times of stress (Kabay
1997) and are caused by microscopic blood parasites that may easily
be spread in the bloody conditions that mulesing creates.
More Humane Alternatives to Mulesing
Many more humane, effective, and cost-efficient alternatives to
mulesing are available, as has been discovered not only by Australian
farmers who do not employ the procedure—a group that is estimated
to include as much as 40 percent of producers (Beck et al. 1985
in Counsell 2001)—but also by all sheep farmers in the U.K.
(the world’s fifth-largest supplier of greasy wool), where
mulesing is generally prohibited in favor of alternative flystrike-prevention
methods. Moreover, unlike mulesing, which only addresses breech
strikes, most of the alternatives described below help prevent all
forms of flystrike, including strikes on the breech, body, and face.
Selection for Less Susceptible Breeds
Experts regard genetic selection of sheep who are resistant to flystrike
as the most effective long-term solution. Tellam and Bowles (1996)
cite a study in which only 8 percent of 1-year-old resistant sheep
suffered from fleece-rot (a condition that predisposes sheep to
flystrike), as compared to 53 percent of susceptible sheep. Also,
the incidence of body strike in the resistant and the susceptible
groups was 1 percent and 19 percent, respectively. Selection of
merinos with smoother skin would not only reduce flystrike, but
would also improve wool quality. Scobie of AgResearch (2004) observes
that “[w]ool quality tends to suffer on wrinkly sheep”
and, citing the findings of other scientists, further reports, “Australian
research has shown that mulesed wrinkly sheep were just as likely
to be flystruck as plain-bodied sheep that were not mulesed.”
Scobie
et al. (2002) found that sheep with naturally occurring
areas of bare skin on their breech were significantly less likely
to develop flystrike. In these experimenters’ study, lambs
with the greatest breech bareness were not flystruck, whereas 22
percent of those with the least breech bareness were—statistics
that suggest that breeding for breech bareness can be an effective
flystrike-prevention tool.
Increased Monitoring and Treatment
Perhaps the most effective option is simply to increase monitoring
for early signs of flystrike and to provide treatment when necessary.
Evidence gathered through communication with organic producers suggests
that “fly strike is largely preventable if farmers keep sheep
healthy and inspect them regularly” (Morris 2000 p 205). Dr.
John Auty, a veterinarian who formerly worked with the Australian
Department of Primary Industry as the assistant director of the
Bureau of Animal Health, has been quoted as saying, “Mulesing
does not free the sheep from blowfly strike, but proper husbandry
practices, including close inspection of sheep, will reduce and
virtually eliminate flystrike.” Early-warning computer-simulation
models can help predict times of increased blowfly activity (Tellam
and Bowles 1996) and may be useful for warning producers to increase
monitoring efforts.
Insecticides
A study of flystrike control methods in the U.K. found that “at
present, the control of blowfly strike is most commonly achieved
through the application of insecticide or other larvicide, either
used prophylactically or, more commonly, in response to perceived
seasonal patterns of high strike challenge” (Fenton
et
al. 1998 p 342). Tellam and Bowles (1996) write that “[o]ne
of the mainstays of the wool industry for control of blowfly strike
is the use of insecticides[,]” which can be “used in
dressings applied to flystruck areas on sheep” (p 263).
Vaccinations
Bowles
et al. (1996) were able to “successfully vaccinate
sheep against larvae of the sheep blowfly” and concluded that
“protection from flystrike through vaccination using native
larval antigens can be achieved” (pp 1347, 1351). Tellam and
Bowles (1996) report data from several trials that reveal that nonvaccinated
sheep were more than twice as likely to develop blowfly-infected
sites as vaccinated sheep, more than half of whom were completely
protected from infections (as determined by “a failure of
the larvae to establish a wound on vaccinated sheep”), as
compared to none of the nonvaccinated sheep (p 267).
Topical Applications
Painless topical applications for preventing wool growth are currently
being developed. Researchers at the University of Adelaide, funded
by Australian Wool Innovation (AWI 2003), recently discovered a
protein that, when applied to sheep’s skin, causes follicles
to die and seems to cause no ill effects for the sheep. When applied
to sheep’s breech area, this protein would create large areas
of bare skin, producing the same effect as mulesing but without
inflicting painful wounds.
Sterile Male Blowfly Release
As female blowflies only mate once during their lifetime, the release
of sterile male blowflies can help significantly reduce populations.
Tellam and Bowles (1996) note that “[t]he suppression of fly
numbers is usually accentuated by further releases of sterile male
insects until the natural population is no longer sustainable”
(p 268).
Baited Traps
Dymock and Forgie (1995) used a non-insecticidal blowfly trap in
an area where all four flystrike species were present and, during
the first year of observation, found that only four of 600 unmulesed
sheep were struck. Those four cases represent a strike rate of 0.0067
percent, which compares favorably to the strike rate of 2 percent
per year that was found in another study in New South Wales, where
mulesing is prevalent (Wardhaugh and Morton 1990 in Morris 2000).
Other researchers have found that the use of bait traps, both synthetic
and organic, are effective in controlling blowfly populations (Smite
and Wall 1998, Fisher et al. 1998). Another advantage to trapping
is that the volume of flies in the traps themselves can serve as
an early warning signal for producers to increase flystrike monitoring
and treatment efforts.
Improved Farm-Management Practices: Reduced Stocking Densities,
Careful Diet Selection, Rearing in Regions Less Hospitable to Blowfly
Populations, Timely Shearing and Crutching, and Elimination of Tail
Docking
French
et al. (1994) surveyed 2,451 sheep farmers and found
that “[t]he risk of a farm[’s] reporting at least one
case of blowfly strike increased as flock size and stocking density
increased” (p 51). Furthermore, there was no significant positive
association between the practice of tail-docking and reduced incidence
of flystrike. These findings suggest that farmers who reduce stocking
densities will lessen their sheep’s risk of flystrike and
that tail-docking offers no such benefit. Leathwick and Heath (2001)
found that diet could also play a role in flystrike prevalence and
that lambs who grazed on forage consisting of birdsfoot trefoil
were less likely to suffer from flystrike than lambs who grazed
on ryegrass and white clover. Producers can effectively control
flystrike even further by rearing sheep in cool, dry regions where
blowfly populations are less likely to flourish. And Tellam and
Bowles (1996) explain that shearing and crutching (“the removal
of dags and urine-stained wool from around the breech area”),
especially when synchronized with the worst periods of fly activity,
decrease “the likelihood of fly strike” by “reducing
the attractiveness of this region to the gravid female blowfly”
(pp 262-263).
Live Exports
Every year in Australia, about 6 million sheep—the highest
number of any country—are exported to the Middle East for
use in religious slaughter practices that require animals to be
alive upon receipt. Most of these sheep are merinos who are no longer
productive in the wool industry (Strong and Minchin 2003, The Australian
Sheep and Wool Industries on the Web 2004). During overseas transport,
animals are crammed onto multideck vessels that travel for weeks
before docking at their destinations. Industry workers and researchers
alike have documented great suffering and mortality during all phases
of live export.
High Mortality
Norris and Richards (1989) examined official reports from 181 Australian
shipments of live sheep and found on-board mortality rates as high
as 4.4 percent. During the 145 Middle Eastern voyages studied, 140,711
sheep died—nearly 1,000 animals per voyage. Mortality occurred
mainly at sea (77 percent) but also during unloading (20 percent).
In fact, 27,505 sheep died during unloading in the Middle East alone,
probably because of rough handling, the animals’ weakened
states, or a combination of both. Black et al. (1994) also studied
mortality rates and found that more than 1,600 deaths occurred aboard
a single vessel that was exporting sheep from New Zealand.
The lengthy duration of these journeys prolongs suffering and exacerbates
mortality. Norris and Richards (1989) found that loading could take
up to five days, the voyage itself up to 32 days, and unloading
up to 11 days. They wrote that unloading could be “unnecessarily
slow” and lead to “excessive mortality” (p 101).
Each of these grueling procedures can take even longer, as was painfully
proved last summer on the
Cormo Express, where sheep suffered
in searing heat for 80 days after Middle Eastern countries rejected
them, claiming that they were diseased.
Grinding Alive
At sea, sick or injured animals are often thrown down chutes leading
to a macerator that grinds them up and dumps their remains into
the sea. On a recent episode of Australia’s
60 Minutes,
an experienced rancher and veteran of many live-export voyages stated
that these chutes can be nine stories high and that animals are
often alive when they are thrown into the grinders. He explained,
“What they do is, when they die and they’re out at sea,
they drop them down a big laundry chute into a mincer at the bottom
and it just smashes them up and squirts them out the side into the
water. … It’s just like a laundry chute, opening door
on each floor and you just drop them down. And in quite a lot of
cases, the sheep are still alive. In theory, there is plenty of
time to cut their throats and kill them first, but they just get
put in the chute alive” (Carleton 2003).
Smothering and Suffocation
Black
et al. (1994) found that because live-export vessels
typically only allow for a portion of the animals to be fed at one
time, intense competition during feeding leads to animals’
losing their footing and being smothered or crushed to death. The
researchers found that 31 percent of the sheep who died aboard one
vessel suffocated or were smothered to death. By the later stages
of the voyage, excrement had accumulated to such a degree that some
animals had become stuck in feces and were unable to move. The live-export
worker who was interviewed on
60 Minutes described appalling
conditions on the
Cormo Express: accumulations of feces
in pens, possibly as much as a foot deep; a mere 6 inches of headroom
at most for the sheep who were still alive; and the bodies of their
dead companions littering the floors (Carleton 2003). Cramped and
filthy, such conditions would likely lead to many animals’
becoming trapped in excrement and under decomposing carcasses, eventually
being smothered or suffocated to death or—unable to access
food or water—dying of starvation and dehydration.
Starvation
Norris
et al. (1990a) concluded that about half of all
sheep deaths during sea transport to the Middle East are caused
by starvation, even when food is available. Richards et al. (1989)
found a similarly high rate of death by starvation (43.4 percent).
The live-export industry has invented many euphemisms for starvation
to deemphasize the suffering that it entails; Norris et al. (1990a)
provide the following examples: shy-feeding syndrome, inanition,
anorexia, failure-to-eat syndrome, voluntary feed refusal, and persistent
inappetance. These euphemisms are designed to conceal the fact that
live exports are so traumatic that many sheep simply stop eating,
despite the availability of food and their own urgent need.
Extreme Temperatures
Extreme temperatures, exceeding 40°C and 90 percent humidity,
create miserable conditions for overcrowded animals. Norris and
Richards (1989) report that the death rate among sheep in one shipment
more than tripled with a 4C rise in temperature. Black
et al.
(1994) suggest that during times of high temperatures, animals move
en masse toward ventilators, often trampling each other
to death. A recent Australian government-issued report found evidence
that “mortality levels in livestock quickly increase due to
heat stress once ships have docked in the ports of the Middle East”
and concluded that “there should be a prohibition on exports
of sheep from [certain] areas … during periods of the year
[when] the risks are greatest” (Keniry
et al. 2003,
pp 30, 42).
Temperature extremes can occur at any time, however, and Norris
and Richards (1989) warn that their “findings do not support
the industry view that the highest death rates occur in July to
September, when temperature and humidity in the Middle East peak
for the year,” observing that mortality can be just as high
in other months (p 101). These facts show that only a categorical—not
just a seasonal—ban on live exports can prevent animals’
suffering.
Injuries
Rough handling, overcrowding, and hunger-induced weakness can result
in serious injuries and suffering. Richards
et al. (1989)
found that “[m]ost shipboard cases of trauma were acute and
associated with splaying of the hind limbs on slippery floors during
loading” (p 38). Norris
et al. (1990a) determined
that “injuries sustained during loading of the ship and in
the first few days of the voyage” led to “about 12 percent”
of on-board deaths (138); Richards
et al. (1989) calculated
that “trauma” accounted for 10.6 percent (33). Sick
and injured animals are usually left to die without veterinary care.
A veteran live-export industry worker explains that nonambulatory
animals—those who have been disabled to the point at which
they are unable to walk—are “just left in the walkway
sometimes for a couple of days just kicking their legs” (Carleton
2003). Recently obtained video footage of handlers beating, kicking,
and otherwise abusing worn-out animals in the Middle East tragically
illustrates the potential for injury during unloading (see www.petatv.com/tvpopup/video.asp?video=wool).
Sidhom (2003) reports that during unloading of Australian animals
in Egypt, workers “frequently hit the animals with long sticks
armed with rusty nails, with metal bars, and sometimes even with
hammers” (p 1).
Diseases and Infections
Norris
et al. (1990a) estimate that 26.9 percent of all
deaths on board live-export vessels are a result of
salmonellosis
infections and that within the first nine days on board, about 12
percent of all sheep are excreting salmonella. Norris and Richards
(1989) note that antibiotics are often introduced into the sheep’s
drinking water and that in one year, more than 5.02 million doses
were administered—presumably to combat the highly pestilent,
filthy conditions to which the sheep were subjected, especially
those on the lower tiers, where manure from the tiers above falls
and accumulates and where high concentrations of ammonia are constant
irritants. Sidhom (2003) examined a load of sheep and cattle on
board the
MV Maysora, which had traveled from Australia
to Egypt, and observed that “[l]iquid manure flowed into the
food troughs, where the food was sodden and soiled with sheep manure
from the decks above” (p 1). Among diseases and other conditions
described by Norris et al. (1990a) as causing death are muscular
disease, lupinosis, foot abscesses, kidney stones, pneumonia, dehydration,
and heat stress.
Scabby mouth disease, also known as contagious ecthyma, is sometimes
fatal and can be transmitted to humans. Over the years—and
most recently in the summer of 2003, with the
Cormo Express—Middle
Eastern countries have rejected shipments of animals who showed
signs of scabby mouth, thus causing even greater suffering for sheep
by prolonging their ordeal on ships where conditions inevitably
worsened and mortality was rampant. The
Cormo Express was
an especially tragic example: After being rejected by Saudi Arabian
officials, the sheep were stranded on board the vessel for an additional
64 days—the time it took to find a country that was willing
to accept the survivors—during which time mortality increased
to 9.82 percent, and the death toll rose to 5,691 (Keniry
et
al. 2003). Such rejections have been ongoing for decades and
threaten to continue, especially considering the conclusion of Higgs
et al. (1996) that “using current technology it is
not possible to deliver shipments of sheep to the Middle East that
are guaranteed completely free of scabby mouth” (p 215). The
only way to prevent further suffering for rejected, stranded sheep
is to ban the live-export industry altogether.
Emergency Conditions
Unpredictable emergency conditions often arise that jeopardize the
well-being of animals on board. Some recent examples, compiled from
Australian Maritime Safe Authority reports (AMSA 1990, 1999, 2002),
include the inadequate ventilation that killed almost 10,000 sheep
on board the
Cormo Express in 1990; the fire that killed
more than 67,000 on board the
Uniceb in 1996; the sinking
of the
Guernsey Express in the same year, which led to
the drowning deaths of more than 1,500 cattle at sea; the failure
of the
Temburong’s ventilation system in 1999, which
caused 829 cattle to die of suffocation; and the cyclone of the
same year, which caused the
Kalymnian Express’ engine
to fail and led to the deaths of more than 300 cattle. Malfunctions,
natural disasters, and fires inevitably lead to tragedy on such
highly populated, heavily crowded vessels.
Banning Mulesing and Live Exports Is the Only Humane Option
Mulesing is only one of many flystrike-control methods available.
As the scientific literature proves, it causes animals harm and
can sometimes leave them vulnerable to flystrike by inflicting wounds.
Mulesing is an abusive practice that causes acute, chronic pain
and should be abolished as a form of cruelty to animals—especially
in light of the fact that other effective and more humane flystrike-prevention
methods are available. This conclusion was foreshadowed in 1989
by the Australian Senate Select Committee on Animal Welfare when
it observed that “in areas of higher sheep density and smaller
flocks, there was evidence that some producers were able and willing
to put in the extra time and effort to breed out faults in sheep,
to select resistant sheep, to control worms, [and] to inspect and
crutch and jet with chemicals more frequently to ensure a healthy
flock without recourse to mulesing” (qtd in Pope 1997 p 10).
As for the live export of sheep, the evidence shows that no degree
of preparation or standards or any other actions short of a complete
ban can ensure animals’ safety during such long and arduous
journeys. The Australian Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries, and
Forestry—spurred on by the international outcry from the
Cormo
Express incident—recently commissioned a report on the
many problems associated with live exports, and the result was a
call for many changes on animal-welfare grounds. The government
also invited public comments, and “[a] majority (76 percent)
of submissions expressed views opposed to the livestock export trade”
(Keniry
et al. 2003 p 10)—a response that is hardly
surprising, given the intense cruelty inherent in the live-export
industry. As the Australian Senate Select Committee on Animal Welfare
has acknowledged, “[I]t is not in the interests of the animal
to be transported to the Middle East for slaughter” (qtd in
Norris
et al. 1990a p 133).
Year after year, millions of sheep suffer hideously during mulesing
and live export in the Australian wool industry. The pain and death
that these practices have been irrefutably shown to cause prove
that no degree of standards or “improvements” can ensure
the welfare of animals who are subjected to them and that the only
compassionate solution is a categorical ban on both.
This report was completed on March 24, 2004. Please direct any questions
or comments to Cem Akin at 757-622-7382, extension 8013, or CemA@peta.org.
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