The Irish Mail on Sunday

EXPOSED – hidden horrors of your gourmet Parma ham

Animals crammed into cages littered with the corpses of piglets rotting in their own blood... in a midnight raid on a prized Italian ‘prosciutto’ farm, our man bears witness to scenes of unspeakabl­e carnage and cruelty

- By Ian Birrell Additional reporting: Hannah Roberts

First came the smell, an acrid stench of ammonia clinging to the breeze as I walked through the dark towards some big sheds. Then I heard sounds of snorting and snuffling, punctured by the odd piercing scream. Stepping inside one of the buildings, I passed the bodies of two small piglets dumped in a pool of blood. Then I saw scenes of horrifying carnage and cruelty. Inside one giant room, I found hundreds of piglets, many barely a month old, stuffed into crowded pens alongside dozens of dead, diseased and dying animals. Almost every cage held small corpses: some stretched out as if asleep, others in heaps that could have lain there a couple of days. Many more creatures were too weak to move, little pink bodies heaving as they panted for breath on metal slats. In one pen I counted 21 animals. Ten were dead, six seemed to be dying - one with a disfigurin­g skin disease - and Just five were still alive. One sparky little fellow clambered up on a pile of corpses then sank to its trotters and stared at me pitifully. Each one of these caged animals - alive or dead, healthy or sick, big or small - had a small blue tattoo on one of their thighs. This proved they were the raw material for one of Italy's most famous prestige food products: prized legs of Parma ham. Forget all those rustic images of pampered pigs trotting happily around bucolic Italian fields and forests. For lurking behind the promotion of this world-famous 'artisan' food lies industrial­ised factory fanning at its most harsh and intense. A series of recent reports have accused farmers of gross cruelty, leading the multi-million-pound Parma Ham Consortium to accuse animal rights activists of smears. The trade body insists images of filthy pens and sick animals are 'not credible'. It is fighting for the future of an iconic product, protected by European law, which supports 50,000 jobs and 4,000 farms, while earning the medie-val metropolis of Parma global recog-nition as a Unesco 'Creative City of Gastronomy'. The product, once the preserve of specialist delicatess­ens, has now become a highly popular item on supermarke­t shelves, thanks mainly because of the lower prices charged in discount supermarke­ts. I went into three farms alongside the secretive investigat­ions team from Essere Animali - an Italian group campaignin­g to end factory farming abuses- to probe the damning accusa-tions against the producers of this world-famous cured meat. Last year they released shocking footage secretly recorded over six months on a farm near Bologna. It showed workers throwing animals

‘Out of 21 pigs in one of the pens, 10 were dead’

around, lifting them by their legs and dumping some to die in corridors. Yet even Francesco Ceccarelli, the investigat­ion team's head who has spent two years probing the produc-tion of Parma ham and the similar Prosciutto di San Daniele, was horrified by the evidence we discov-ered during our nocturnal visit to one farm near Brescia. I've never seen so many dead,' he said. 'Some have been dead for days and there are so many sick with terrible eyes and skin. I feel such compassion for them since there seems to be no care, no medicine. This is like a death camp for them.' We entered the farms in a military-style operation, starting shortly after midnight. After dressing in a dark boiler suit, we clamped masks over our mouths for protection from the hideous fumes created by thousands of pigs clustered in giant sheds. One man with a walkie-talkie stood guard as we checked to see if shed doors had been left open so we could start our disturbing tour. After pushing open the door to the first room, hundreds of pigs crammed into pens looked up startled as our lights flashed on. All seemed to have their tails sliced off - although routine docking (tail clipping) is forbidden under European Union regulation­s. I saw some pigs with bloodied tail stumps where bored or stressed neighbours had munched on them. This was far from the only sign of cannibalis­m - corpses I saw later in rooms down the corridor also appeared to have been chewed. Scores of rats scurried round the filthy shed, some sprinting along pipes beside my head. One piglet trapped in a corridor without water trotted up and nudged my legs. These are curious and highly intelli-gent creatures. Yet they were packed in their barren pens, standing on slat-ted floors and lacking any comforts such as straw or sawdust as demanded by European rules. Some seemed sick with infected eyes - caused by high levels of ammo-nia in the air, claim activists - or festering sores on their bodies. One had an ear horribly blown up like a balloon. This farm, with so many dead piglets littering its pens, seemed dirty and devoid of decent care. Yet even in another that was signifi-cantly better kept, I discovered condi-tions far removed from the natural imagery associated with this industry. There were rows of female pigs in

sow stalls that left them room to sit and stand but never to turn around. Such restrictiv­e crates have long since been banned here.

Activists said the animals are kept confined in such cramped conditions for four weeks during artificial inseminati­on. Like the other farms I saw, there was no outside access for the animals during their short lives in caged captivity. Another room was filled with farrowing crates, which held mothers under red lights – again with no space to turn – and litters of piglets beside them. Designed to stop offspring being crushed, these devices are banned in some European countries. An estimated half of Italy’s nine million pigs are reared for Parma ham in the Po Valley region, many in the ‘golden triangle’ around Brescia, Cremona and Mantua, lying between Milan and Venice. Only about 35,000 are raised by organic means. Like Scotch whisky and Stilton cheese, Parma ham has Protected Designatio­n of Origin status from the EU. The trade body responsibl­e for the industry ensures the production of ham is governed by rigid and detailed rules, from the three permitted breeds of pig through to the salt used for curing. Animal rights activists argue that given the price premium – protected foods can sell for twice the cost of competitor­s – the industry should extend its rules to guard pigs from abuse and the cruelties of factory farming, even if this puts up costs.

‘We suspect 80% [of pigs] are raised in these intensive methods,’ said Ceccarelli. ‘For a start they could give a signal by abandoning those nursery cages and abolishing routine castration. These animals are really suffering.’

One investigat­or claimed that, within days of starting work undercover on a farm, they saw a worker smash a pig’s face with a metal bar.

Lega Anti Vivisezion­e, another animal-rights group, recently released footage from six more farms in Lombardy – four of them breeding pigs for Parma ham – that showed illegal practices, carcasses, overcrowdi­ng, sick pigs and poor hygiene. ‘How can you talk about selling high-quality products when animals are reared in these conditions?’ asked Roberto Bennati, the group’s vice-president.

Yet local politician­s are calling for interventi­on to stop the activists’ campaign because it threatens ‘dangerous negative fallout on the entire production of a regional gastronomi­c excellence’, in the words of Fabio Rainieri, a councillor from the hard-right League party. Certainly the revelation­s threaten to ruin the image of the celebrated air-cured hams from the hills around Parma, famous from Roman times when their sweet taste was praised by Cato the Elder and the meat was eaten by Hannibal.

Ireland imports more than 10,000 Parma hams a year but the biggest sales are in pre-sliced packs which account for 70% of exports. Meanwhile, thousands of tourists visit factories around Parma to learn how the hams are cured. It is claimed dry air from the Apennine Mountains gives the delicacy its special flavour – along with local cereal grains and the high-protein by-products of Parmesan cheesemaki­ng that were traditiona­lly fed to the region’s pigs.

Hugh Fearnley-Whittingst­all, the chef and campaigner for ethical food production, said the revelation­s underlined that ‘most Parma ham, like bacon or sausages, is a mass-produced product’.

‘Pigs are at the frontline of animal welfare, living miserable lives. Anyone who cares about the welfare of pigs should only buy pork, ham, bacon and charcuteri­e from freerange, outdoor-reared pigs that is clearly labelled as such,’ he said.

Reportedly, the 2001 fight over the location of the European Food Safety Agency was won when Silvio Berlusconi, then prime minister, offered all his fellow leaders a lifetime supply of the famous ham. The

‘How can they call this a high-quality product?’ ‘Scores of rats scurried round the filthy sheds’

body is based in Parma.

These revelation­s about Parma ham pig farms come soon after the World Health Organisati­on’s decision to classify processed meat as a carcinogen – although the guardians of Parma ham insist it is a ‘genuine and completely natural’ product.

The Parma Ham Consortium insists animal welfare is a matter for Italian and European lawmakers. ‘The real scope of the campaign seems not the care of animals but to attack the good name of the Prosciutto di Parma [Parma Ham],’ it said. It said none of its 145 recognised producers had ever been formally accused of animal maltreatme­nt. ‘We condemn any violation of the basic norms of animal welfare,’ it added.

The consortium likes to boast of producing ‘the King of Hams’. But the memory of seeing those dead and dying pigs trapped in such callous conditions makes such claims stick in my throat.

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 ??  ?? APPALLED: Ian Birrell points at dead piglets at the farm near Brescia. Inset above: A pig crams its snout through the bars of its tiny cage and, inset top, another animal in its cramped stall
APPALLED: Ian Birrell points at dead piglets at the farm near Brescia. Inset above: A pig crams its snout through the bars of its tiny cage and, inset top, another animal in its cramped stall
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 ??  ?? NATIONAL FAVOURITE: Parma ham is hugely popular in Ireland and is an extremely lucrative industry
NATIONAL FAVOURITE: Parma ham is hugely popular in Ireland and is an extremely lucrative industry

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