Daily Mirror

Comply with law to keep animals safe from harm

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ANIMALS are being abused in slaughterh­ouses in front of CCTV cameras but there’s still no action being taken.

Only one in 300 complaints about animal welfare in UK farms led to a prosecutio­n over the last four years, with half of the accused holdings not even inspected.

A report by Animal Equality and the Animal

Law Foundation also said that fewer than three in 100 of the

UK’s estimated 291,000 farms had an annual inspection by a public body between 2018 and 2021.

It also found how there is just one inspector in place for every 205 farms in the UK, unveiling the stark reality of law enforcemen­t.

The report gathered data from 65 investigat­ions conducted by a number of animal protection organisati­ons between 2016-2021. Illegality or substandar­d practices were discovered on every facility, which included evidence of pigs having their tails cut off, cows unable to walk or stand, and hens crammed into overcrowde­d cages. But over 69% of cases resulted in no subsequent formal enforcemen­t action.

The cases include a slaughterh­ouse where secretly placed cameras beside official CCTV filmed workers using live ducks to knock off feet from dead birds that had become wedged in the shackle line. The Food Standards Agency investigat­ed, which put forward two potential charges against the company, but the Crown Prosecutio­n Service concluded that it was not in the public interest to prosecute.

Another investigat­ion found chickens dying on the barn floor where many dead bodies were left to rot. Hidden camera footage also showed workers throwing dead chickens at live birds, and holding chickens upside down and swinging them into each other. The RSPCA reported the farm to the Animal Plant and Health Agency but no action was taken.

The report, titled the Enforcemen­t Problem, says that with more than 180 public bodies responsibl­e, “inconsiste­ncies and confusion have arisen”, and added that “the disjointed nature of regulation and law enforcemen­t has enabled a lack of continuity, enforcemen­t and accountabi­lity.”

Abigail Penny, Executive Director of Animal Equality UK, said that “noncomplia­nce is endemic” “yet farms are typically receiving little more than a slap on the wrist”.

Edie Bowles, Executive Director of The Animal Law Foundation, added: “The British public wants animal welfare standards to be high and those who break them held to account. Sadly, the data shows that even where laws exist, they seldom get enforced.

“The laws that the public, policymake­rs and campaigner­s work so hard to pass through Parliament need to mean something in practice.”

Non-compliance is endemic and farms receive no more than a slap on the wrist

 ?? ?? HURT Pigs had tails cut
HURT Pigs had tails cut

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