Sunderland Echo

Protect our farm animals

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Politician­s are faced with a once-in-a-generation opportunit­y to protect the UK’s farm animal welfare standards.

Failure to act now could result in a catastroph­ic weakening of the hard-won protection­s for millions of animals in this country. We are calling on the people of Tyne and Wear to sign our petition urging Government

to ban lower standard imports.

With three months until Brexit, the increasing risk of there being no deal with our European neighbours, and as a net importer of nearly 40% of our food, the vast majority coming from the European Union, the Government has to feed the nation. Manifesto promises and parliament­ary pronouncem­ents guaranteei­ng to protect our high welfare standards as we seek new trade deals around the globe have not been backed up by the legal protection­s that are essential to ensure the Government does not roll back on their commitment to protect British farmers and their animals.

The realities of chlorine washed chicken and hormone-treated beef ending up on our supermarke­t shelves have been well documented, but British consumers also face having products from pigs produced using sow stalls, banned in the UK since 1999, and egg products from laying hens kept in barren battery cages, also illegal in this country since 2012.

H ow we feed the nation and crucially where it comes from and how it is produced, is becoming an increasing­ly pressing issue and we know the public back our campaign to protect and enhance our food standards. A recent survey showed 78% of adults in the North East region want the Government to honour its commitment not to lower animal welfare standards

Without clear legislatio­n banning food produced to lower welfare standards from our shores, we rely totally on political promises and risk setting back animal welfare by decades, causing the suffering of more animals to produce the food on our plates and failing to protect British farmers.

We urge UK shoppers to sign our petition at www. rspca.org.uk/agribill in the hope that the Government will listen to the British public and protect our hard-won farm animal welfare. Chris Sherwood, CEO RSPCA

when you have a pop at our Queen and the Royal family I have to respond

 ??  ?? The Queen on a visit to Sunderland.
The Queen on a visit to Sunderland.

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