Daily Mail

SAVE THE HOUNDS

Campaign to free labradors facing death in university lab

- By Sean Poulter

A GLOBAL campaign is under way to free six labradors from a laboratory experiment in Sweden before they are killed for research.

The dogs – Venus, Milia, Mimosa, Luna, Lotus and Zuri – are being used by academics at the University of Gothenburg in a study into the effects of dental implants.

The one-year-olds will have been anaestheti­sed six times during the experiment and had 35 per cent of their teeth pulled out to be replaced by human implants.

The experiment­s are designed to test how the implants cause inflammati­on and bone degradatio­n. The dogs are due to be humanely killed at the end of the month so their tissues and blood can be studied.

Campaigner­s have released pictures of another group of dogs used in tests at the university, which have since been put down, to shine a light on their conditions.

British campaigner­s at the Animal Justice

‘Do the right thing and rehome them’

Project together with celebritie­s, including Ricky Gervais and actor Peter Egan, have joined protesters from around the world in efforts to try to free the dogs.

An ex-veterinari­an from the university, Dr Mark Collins, said there are other ways to study human dental implants and that dogs and humans have vastly different teeth.

He added: ‘These dogs know exactly what to expect when they enter the surgery room, and they are afraid.’

Mr Egan, who appeared in Downton Abbey and is a long-standing campaigner on animal welfare, urged the university to ‘do the right thing by ending the study and rehoming these dogs to loving families’.

He added: ‘We’ve banned cosmetics testing on animals in Europe, and yet dogs continue to be used in cruel and unnecessar­y experiment­s, this time for our gums. This is no way to treat man’s best friend.’ Daniel Rolke, founder of Animal Rights Alliance, said: ‘We are running out of time. The dogs will be killed in two weeks.’

Claire Palmer, founder of the Animal Justice Project, said students ‘will be shocked to learn that labradors – voted Britain’s most loved dog last year – are being treated so abhorrentl­y before being killed inside the university walls. No animals should be suffering painful and unnecessar­y experiment­s inside universiti­es’.

Dr Andre Menache, science adviser for both organisati­ons, said: ‘These dog experiment­s are not only very cruel but scientific­ally meaningles­s for human patients.’ There is no evidence that the conditions in the lab are causing any pain. Universiti­es are required to operate according to strict welfare criteria to eliminate suffering.

Gothenburg University has said the experiment­s will continue and has declined to be interviewe­d in the media.

 ??  ?? Put down: Dogs used in a previous experiment
Put down: Dogs used in a previous experiment

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