The Independent

‘Horror show’ as 38 puppies die during flight to Canada

Officials find 500 French bulldogs in hold of Ukraine plane

- ANDY GREGORY

Dozens of dead puppies have been discovered on a passenger plane travelling from Ukraine to Canada.

The Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines (UIA) flight from Kiev was carrying approximat­ely 500 young French bulldogs, 38 of which were dead upon arrival at Toronto’s Pearson internatio­nal airport last Saturday.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA), which is investigat­ing the incident, told The Independen­t that “many of the dogs were suffering from dehydratio­n, weakness and/or vomiting”.

Animal welfare campaigner­s allege that the case is merely the tip of a thriving puppy farming business in Ukraine, driven by demand for thoroughbr­ed puppies from unwitting consumers who are unaware of their new pet’s history.

“These commercial operations are run by large puppy mills that house and breed hundreds and thousands of dogs every year in typically unsterile conditions where the dogs are crammed together,” Lucas Hixson of SPCA Internatio­nal told CBC News from Slavutych.

Concerns were first raised in Kiev by purported witnesses at the airport who recorded footage appearing to show a significan­t number of animal crates being unloaded from a car. Another person who was at the cargo area of the Toronto airport to pick up her friend’s cat described the scene as a “horror show” and a “nightmare”, taking pictures purporting to show dead puppies in bin bags outside the cargo warehouse the following day.

Describing the scene on Facebook, Abby Lorenzen, a profession­al show dog handler, said: “Those animals didn’t need to suffer like that. That airline should of never taken on so [many] live animals to begin with.”

In a social media post on Friday, UIA acknowledg­ed the incident, writing: “Everyone at UIA offers its condolence­s for the tragic loss of animal life on our flight. UIA is working with local authoritie­s to determine what happened and to make any changes necessary to prevent such a situation from occurring again.”

However, in an earlier statement to Facebook on Tuesday, screengrab­bed by the Global News TV channel before it was deleted, the airline alleged that 24 hours after the incident it had received no official confirmati­on from Toronto airport or Canadian aviation authoritie­s that animals had died.

The statement acknowledg­ed that some 500 animals had been on board, adding: “UIA regularly undergoes an IOSA operationa­l safety and quality audit, the standards of which govern the transport of live animals in a very strict and rigorous way.”

UIA is a member of the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n, which has voluntary measures intended to restrict the transport of live animals. In Canada, most airlines only allow two animal crates per flight and only fly with caged animals in temperatur­es below 29.5C, CBC reported. The Independen­t has contacted UIA for comment.

“Canada has rigorous standards for animal imports in order to protect Canadian animals from the introducti­on of serious animal diseases,” the CFIA said, adding that Canada’s dog import requiremen­ts are determined by the Health of Animals Act and the Health of Animals Regulation­s.

“All import requiremen­ts must be met before an animal is imported. If an animal does not meet the import requiremen­ts, an investigat­ion will be made on the specifics of the case. Depending on the results of the investigat­ion, the animal may be ordered to be removed from Canada, monetary penalties may be applied or legal actions may be pursued.”

 ?? (Google Maps) ?? Puppies were flown from Kiev to Toronto’s Pearson airport
(Google Maps) Puppies were flown from Kiev to Toronto’s Pearson airport

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