The New Zealand Herald

Lawyer’s case against meat

- Sarah Knapton

Eating meat could be banned like smoking, one of Britain’s leading barristers has predicted, as he called for the offence of “ecocide” to be introduced to prosecute those who damage nature on a massive scale.

Michael Mansfield, QC, said the farming of livestock for meat was destroying the planet and called for legislatio­n to criminalis­e those who caused global warming and the wilful destructio­n of wildlife.

In a message delivered at the launch of the Vegan Now campaign, which encourages people to stop eating meat and dairy products, Mansfield said “ecocide” must be made a crime.

“I think when we look at the damage eating meat is doing to the planet, it is not prepostero­us to think that one day it will become illegal,” he said.

“There are plenty of things that were once commonplac­e that are now illegal, such as smoking inside.

“We know that the top 3000 companies in the world are responsibl­e for more than £1.5 trillion worth of damage to the environmen­t with meat and dairy production high on the list.

“It is time for a new law on ecocide to go alongside genocide and the other crimes against humanity.”

Mansfield made his comments before a debate on how veganism can help protect the planet, at the Labour Party Conference in Brighton.

The world’s top three meat producers are responsibl­e for more greenhouse gases each year than all of France. Around 25 per cent of all greenhouse gases come from agricultur­e, with livestock farming contributi­ng to 80 per cent of the total.

Juliet Gellatley, director of Viva!, a pro-vegan charity, said: “Thirty years ago people didn’t bat an eyelid if you lit a cigarette in a pub or restaurant.

“But now society accepts smoking is harmful and totally unnecessar­y and so we legislated against it. The same could happen with eating meat.

“The global livestock industry is wrecking our most precious flora and fauna. And for nothing more than corporate greed.

“It’s high time we kicked meat and dairy into touch and went vegan now.”

The internatio­nal crime of ecocide was originally proposed in 1970, at the Conference on War and National Responsibi­lity in Washington DC, by Arthur Galston, a biologist who discovered that America’s use of Agent Orange in the Vietnam War had caused devastatio­n to wildlife.

Ecocide was initially included in early drafts of the Rome Statute, which laid out the remit of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) but it was removed in 1996, following objections from Britain and the US.

Now the widespread destructio­n of wildlife can only be prosecuted if it happens during war.

Mansfield added: “I have one singular message: to make ecocide an internatio­nal crime.

“Ecocide was going be a crime, but two nations objected: the United Kingdom and the United States.

“It ties in exactly with veganism, the rights of the animals, the rights of the environmen­t, and the rights of human beings in one package.”

The global livestock industry is wrecking our most precious flora and fauna.

Juliet Gellatley, director of Viva!

 ??  ?? A British lawyer says the farming of livestock for meat is destroying the planet.
A British lawyer says the farming of livestock for meat is destroying the planet.

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