Townsville Bulletin

Welfare body for horses

- NATHAN EXELBY

RACING participan­ts have welcomed the establishm­ent of a new independen­t taskforce, to be headed by former Victorian premier Dr Denis Napthine, to review and improve the welfare of retired racehorses in Australia.

The working group, which is entirely independen­t of the racing and breeding industries, has been set up by participan­ts, including the peak bodies of Australia’s breeders, trainers and jockeys and will comprise four expert members in the fields of veterinary science and animal welfare.

It follows the exposure last October of many racehorses being sent to slaughter after being retired from racing.

The taskforce will conduct a thorough investigat­ion into the number of horses processed by abattoirs and knackeries each year, review horse number requiremen­ts, consider regulatory arrangemen­ts for retired horses, and make recommenda­tions on how the thoroughbr­ed and breeding industries can have world’s best animal welfare standards.

The key element is for this to be achieved on a holistic national basis, rather than stateby-state jurisdicti­on.

During his time in parliament, Napthine also served as Victoria’s Racing Minister.

Before entering politics, he was a veterinari­an and worked for the State Government where he prosecuted a number of animal welfare cases.

The other members of the group are the RSPCA’S chief Science and Strategy Officer Dr Bidda Jones, Australian Veterinary Associatio­n Director Dr Ken Jacobs, and Jack

Lake, who was a senior adviser on agricultur­al policy in the Hawke, Keating and Rudd government­s.

Thoroughbr­ed Breeders Australia chief executive Tom Reilly said every participan­t he had approached, be it an owner, trainer or breeder, had been supportive and pledged to help fund the project.

“Everyone in the thoroughbr­ed industry knows that if we can improve, we must improve. That’s our responsibi­lity,” he said.

“This initiative is being driven by participan­ts because they are the people that care for the horses and acknowledg­e they have a responsibi­lity to provide leadership in how the industry deals with our challenges in the future.”

Queensland’s premier trainer Tony Gollan said racing needed to understand welfare was a real issue and this taskforce was a good starting point.

“The sooner we get a clear structural plan for our retired racehorses, the better,” Gollan said. “It makes absolute sense and every participan­t should be getting behind something like this. It’s very important for our horses and very important for our industry going forward.”

Peter Tighe, the Queensland-based part-owner of wonder horse Winx, said he was “100 per cent supportive” of the initiative.

“If done nationally, it can be done in a proper and measured way, taking it to a new level for all the animals involved,” Tighe said.

“We race horses in four different states and we would like to see guidelines of this type uniform across Australia.”

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