HOLY
COW! PETA TAKES INDIAN GOVERNMENT TO COURT
(1 April 2004)
At
a press conference today, almost four years after Indian Prime Minister
Vajpayee sent a directive to Indias state governments to enforce
animal-protection laws, multiple Grammy Award-winner Pandit Ravi
Shankar announced his support for PETA Indias initiative to
file a case in the Supreme Court against the Indian government for
failing to alleviate the suffering of animals used for leather and
meat. Pandit Ravi Shankar has served as Indias cultural ambassador
for many years and, in 1999, received the Bharath Rathna, Indias
highest civilian honour.
PETA
India has gathered evidence of widespread violations of Indias
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act 1960, including severe cruelty
to Indian cattle, buffalo, goats and sheep, as well as unhygienic
conditions in Indian meat-processing facilities. This evidence shows
cows and other animals being crowded onto trucks in
such high numbers that many become severely injured or die en route,
and later, at most abattoirs, being dragged and cut open, often
with dirty, blunt knives on floors covered in faeces, blood, guts
and urine, some animals being skinned and dismembered while still
conscious.
Says
Pt Ravi Shankar, My heart goes out to Indias suffering
animals. I am hopeful that PETA Indias case will strike a
chord with the [Indian] government and get them to act against criminal
abuse, for animals sake.
Nearly
71 per cent of leather footwear exported from India goes to the
UK, Germany, the US and Italy. According to Budget India, [f]inished
leather accounted for as [much] as 50 per cent
of
total
export[s] from the livestock sector during 2000-01. The UK
was the largest importer of Indian leather footwear and the third-largest
importer of Indian leather goods the following year. PETA India
and Europe are currently supporting an animal-welfare reform initiative
begun by PETA in conjunction with Indias Council for Leather
Exports, calling it a promising, small but important start.
PETA Europe is currently discussing similar projects with Marks
and Spencer, Arcadia and other companies through the British Retail
Consortium but says that more support is required from the Indian
government.
PETAs
advocate in the case, Mr Raj Panjwani, says, Anyone who lives
near [virtually] any abattoir [in India] can attest to the bellowing
of the animals, the stench, filth and disregard for public health.
No matter who wins the [Indian] elections, its high time for
action. A notice has been issued by a bench headed by the
Honourable Justice Y K Sabharwal to Indian state governments and
union territories to answer PETAs charges.
For
more information, visit PETAIndia.com.
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