Activists from Coalition to End Factory Farming (New Zealand Open Rescue, Animal Freedom Aoteaora and the Wellington Animal Rights Network) occupied a battery hen farm in Tuakau recently. Deirdre Sims and Marie Brittain chained themselves to seven-metre high silos on the farm. Sims and Brittain undertook the action to draw attention to the cruelty inherent of factory farming. Dozens of supporters holding banners, placards and chicken costumes were outside the farm. Sims and Brittain were prepared to stay in their position occupying the factory farm overnight but came down voluntarily after police agreed not to arrest them. Ms Sims said, “Over the past year we have been involved in investigating many battery hen farms the across the country. What we've seen is both shocking and sadly typical of factory farms in New Zealand.” “It is heartbreaking to see inside these sheds. You see row upon row of caged hens that are treated as nothing more than egg producing machines, unable to carry out the most basic natural behaviours such as wing stretching and walking.” 88 per cent of the 3 million layer hens in New Zealand are kept confined and suffering in cruel cages. “Our action was not aimed at any particular farm but at the egg industry which is inherently cruel and a government which refuses to act,” says Ms Sims. Coalition to End Factory Farming believes the new draft Code of Welfare for Layer Hens is appallingly inadequate as hens will still be confined in cages for many decades to come. “The egg industry is proposing to introduce colony cages as a replacement for existing battery cages. But colony cages still breach welfare legislation as they do not allow hens to express their normal behaviour. A cage is a cage no matter how the Egg Producers Federation tries to spin it.” In 2006 Parliament’s Regulations Review Committee ruled that battery cages were in breach of the Animal Welfare Act 1999. “This means that we have illegal systems in place sanctioned by our government, purely so that these industries can continue to make a profit - this is completely unacceptable,” says Ms Sims. “A Colmar Brunton poll showed that around 80 per cent of New Zealander's think battery cages are cruel. The public want change and, in an election year, it would pay for the government to listen. “Until factory farming practices cease to exist, we will continue to expose animal cruelty and carry out non-violent civil disobedience actions," concludes Ms Sims. CommentsBob 05/02/2011 17:30
Great advice thanks a lot nzopenrescue.org.nz your guys have done your reseach, good on you!
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nikita 11/20/2011 12:41
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nikita 11/20/2011 12:43
what can i do to help? i would realy like to
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Rescuing animals from factory farms and exposing legalised cruelty. ArchivesFebruary 2012 CategoriesAll |
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