Guest guest Posted November 3, 2002 Report Share Posted November 3, 2002 Hi All, Please read the articles below that mention the live sheep/animal trade eminating from Australia. The State of Western Australia is strengthening ties (trade etc) with Dubai in the Middle East. Please note the West Australian Minister for Agriculture (Minister Kim Chance) made the comment about the live sheep trade " Maybe the public accepts it is simply a trade . . . and they are not offended, " he said. I believe the majority of the West Australian public find the cruelty involved in the live sheep/animal trade deplorable and would like to see the end of the live animal trade from West Australia (and the whole of Australia). Please email Minister Kim Chance and tell him what you think about his comments and the cruelty involved in the live sheep/animal export trade. For further details of recent agonising deaths of thousands of animals at sea in the ships of shame, visit PACAT website at http://www.pacat.org and visit their live animal trade facts and the news section. Email Kim Chance at The Hon Kim Chance MLC The Minister for Agriculture 11th Floor, Dumas House 2 Havelock Street WEST PERTH Western Australia 6005 Fax: (08) 9213 6701 Fax (International) +61 8 9213 6701 email: kim-chance WA dips out on stock and trade The West Australian Newspaper October 28th 2002 http://www.thewest.com.au/20021028/news/state/tw-news-state-home-sto76648.ht ml By Steve Pennells DUBAI IN THE mad, dusty markets of Dubai, a consequence of WA's extended dry is being played out as a kind of global trade war. Where live sheep from WA once dominated, the animal of choice now comes from somewhere closer - Somalia. Or Iran. Certainly not WA. The State's long dry spell and a depressed wool market in the 1990s saw Australia's sheep numbers slump. Yesterday, in a bid to arrest the decline and amid an ever-present outcry over the live sheep trade, a delegation from WA was walking around a United Arab Emirates feedlot and working out how to get more animals there. One of the Middle East's biggest sheep importers, Mubarak al Hadhrami, sighed as he pointed out the 14,000 sheep in a feedlot designed to hold 100,000. If WA had more, he would take them, he said. For the first time, in a country where custom demands sheep be bought while breathing, Mr Mubarak is considering importing carcasses. " This is hurting them (UAE importers) badly, " Agriculture Minister Kim Chance said. Asked how plans to increase exports would go down with opponents of the live sheep trade, Mr Chance said adverse public reaction seemed to have died down. " Maybe the public accepts it is simply a trade . . . and they are not offended, " he said. The horror stories of large-scale death and suffering on sheep ships " are just bloody awful and nobody regrets them more than the trade " . Mr Mubarak pointed to a cooling system which chills the animals' 45C drinking water to half that, as well as shade cloth and sprinklers. " We are taking care of the sheep, " he said. End ************************************************** Trade talks herald WA business boost The West Australian newspaper October 29th 2002 By Steve Pennells DUBAI THE United Arab Emirates will boost business and investment links with WA in the wake of the biggest trade delegation in the State's history. The promise has come in a series of meetings as the 91-strong group tours the Gulf on an unprecedented mission to sell the State. The deputy ruler of Dubai, Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid al Maktoum, said the WA push had not gone unnoticed. Yesterday, Emirates Group chairman Sheikh Ahmed bin Said al Maktoum committed the Emirates airline to daily flights between Dubai and Perth. And Dubal Aluminium, which is doubling its size and looking for a long-term supplier of alumina, described WA's approach as fortuitous. Amid a climate of potential war in Iraq to its north, the UAE is seeing the delegation's visit as a powerful statement. The meeting between Dr Gallop and Sheikh Hamdan was covered by Middle East television and newspapers. Last night, before hosting a gala dinner to open WA's new regional trade office in Dubai, Dr Gallop repeated his push on Gulf television. " Dubai clearly set upon itself the task of becoming the commercial centre of the region, " Dr Gallop said before the broadcast. " It is obvious that if you look to the Middle East, this is a huge centre of activity and, quite frankly, we need to be here. " UAE officials consider a United States strike against Iraq as inevitable but said this week that they did not believe it would have any long-term effect on the Emirates. End Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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