Mumbai, 24th August 2022 (GNI):– In late June and early July of this year, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) India investigators visited Mumbai’s Deonar slaughterhouse, around which time an estimated 1.45 lakh goats and sheep and 10,000 buffaloes were traded. PETA India found that animals arrived from as far away as Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, and Rajasthan to be slaughtered – and the investigators documented shocking cruelty, filth, and rampant violation of animal protection laws.
Photographic evidence of PETA India’s findings can be viewed here, and video evidence can be viewed and downloaded here.
The findings include the following:
· Buffaloes were killed in full view of other buffaloes.
· Buffaloes weren’t stunned before being killed – this means that their throats were cut with a knife while they were still conscious and able to feel pain.
· Workers did not check the animals were dead before beginning the process of peeling off the buffaloes’ skin.
· Workers handled the slaughtered animals’ body parts using bare hands and walked on blood-soaked floors barefoot.
· Piles of buffalo, sheep, and goat hides were left on roads or on the floor for hours.
· Dead goats, sheep, and buffaloes were left lying around at the animal market and transport areas.
· Animals were removed from trucks in a cruel fashion, resulting in serious injuries to goats and sheep.
· Goats were pitted to fight against each other by their sellers at the market.
“If you eat meat or wear leather, this is the kind of cruelty you support,” says PETA India manager of Vegan Projects Dr Kiran Ahuja. “With these findings, we appeal to the public to show mercy to animals by living vegan.”
Animals killed for meat and leather are every bit as intelligent and capable of feeling pain as the dogs and cats we cherish as our companions. They are inquisitive, interesting individuals who value their lives, love their families, and experience fear and pain. Yet the billions of animals killed for food and leather every year have little legal protection from cruelty. They are neglected, mutilated, genetically manipulated, put on drug regimens, housed and bred in ways that cause chronic pain and crippling deformities, and transported through all weather extremes before being killed in gruesome and violent ways.
The latest findings at the Deonar slaughterhouse confirm those of PETA India’s previous visits to the facility. PETA India notes that even though stunning is a requirement under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (Slaughter House) Rules, 2001, and the Food Safety and Standards (Licensing and Registration of Food Businesses) Regulation, 2011, most Indian slaughterhouses do not stun animals prior to slaughter. And the Transport of Animals Rules, 1978, are also frequently violated.
PETA India – whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to eat or wear” and which opposes speciesism, a human-supremacist worldview – reminds consumers that buying meat and leather directly supports the misery animals endure at slaughterhouses. In rejection of this cruelty, more and more people in India and around the world are choosing to live vegan and refusing to eat and wear animals. In this technologically advanced time, it’s easy to find vegan options to meat and leather. For more information, please visit PETAIndia.com or follow the group on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.
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