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From EVU-Secretariat <evu-secretariat

Date 21:12 Jan 10

Subject EUROPEAN VEGETARIAN UNION - NEWSLETTER 1.2003

 

Dear friends,

 

is not too late to wish you all a happy 2003 during which the world

certainly will not yet (!) go veggie but hope for more consideration and

solidarity is permitted all the same. This optimism is supported by the

growing attention that vegetarians enjoy by the international press, and

for

that reason I

have enclosed some articles which you may find interesting and helpful.

 

We have received the following brochures and e-documents which I can

forward to you, should you be interested:

---------- Brochures :

*the Club Natura Oliva - Vegetarian Festival in Turkey -

http://www.european-vegetarian.org/1212.0.html

 

**Veggie Kids worldwide (from USA)

 

----------e-documents:

*THE DETRIMENTAL IMPACTS OF INDUSTRIAL ANIMAL AGRICULTURE

A case for humane and sustainable agriculture - Compassion in World

Farming

Trust

**Joint WHO/FAO expert consultation on diet, nutrition and the

prevention of

chronic diseases - Geneva, Switzerland - 28 January - 1 February 2002 -

DRAFT

 

Happy 2003!

 

with best regards

Herma Caelen

EVU Secretariat

B 7011 Ghlin - 26, Rue Moncoureur

e-mail evu - website http://www.european-vegetarian.org

 

---

 

Contents:

-1- EU: Fisheries ministers reach deal on 2003 quotas

-2- UK Press:

*Vegetarian diet 'cuts heart risk'

**Why vegans were right all along

*** Letter Nitin Mehta/The Independent

-3- Gambia: Lifeline for Biodiversity

-4- Japan/Veggies in Space: Bean me down, Scottie, bean me down

-5- India: " Vegetarian Kerala'' in 10 years

-6- Veggie links and interesting websites

-7- Vegetarian Diary until May 2003

-----------------

 

-1- EU fisheries ministers reach deal on 2003 quotas

BRUSSELS - European Union fisheries ministers agreed last week on

emergency

measures aimed at saving from extinction several species of fish -

mainly

cod - in setting next year's fishing quotas. The quotas, many sharply

reduced from 2002, were less than initially proposed by the EU's

executive

commission. But they still sparked widespread anger among European

fishermen who say the cuts will drive them into bankruptcy.

 

" We have succeeded today in doing something which has never been seen in

the

history of the EU, which is reform of the fisheries sector and the

Common

Fisheries Policy, " EU Fisheries Commissioner Franz Fischler told a news

conference. " This decision was far from easy. It also means there will

be a

bitter pill to swallow in the short term. We want to bring cod back to

an

acceptable level, " he said after five days of tough negotiations.

 

Germany and Sweden were the only nations to vote against the final

compromise deal. Scientists say cod stocks in northern EU waters are at

their lowest levels ever recorded and had recommended a total ban on cod

fishing, a drastic measure that the Commission avoided in order to

minimise

the economic impact for coastal communities. For cod, a culinary staple

in

several European countries, the ministers agreed to a 45 percent cut for

the

North Sea against the 2002 quota. The Commission had first wanted a 79

percent cut. This will be combined with compulsory cuts in the number of

days vessels may spend at sea. In the case of North Sea cod, for

example,

this will be nine days every month.

 

Similar measures and a 45 percent quota cut will apply to hake, where

stocks

are also dangerously low. They will come into force on a temporary basis

from February 1 until a final recovery plan for both species comes into

effect from July 2003.

 

EU ministers also agreed to phase out public aid for building new

vessels

from the end of 2004. While subsidies would still continue until then,

they

would be conditional on member states cutting back more ships than are

added

to the fleet. There would also be new rules for aid to modernise

vessels.

For example, there will be no more subsidies to increase a vessel's

fishing

capacity. The idea of tying up large numbers of boats for weeks on end

had

raised the hackles of countries such as Spain and France - home to the

EU's

largest and second largest fleets - and they were also dismayed by

Commission proposals to trim subsidies.

 

Fischler said all countries had been forced to make painful compromises

to

reach the deal, which he said was urgent to address the desperate stock

levels of cod and related species. " For countries like Britain and

Denmark,

it will be very difficult to accept these measures. But they have said

yes,

because they are aware of their responsibilities, " he said. " Scientists

have

been demanding these measures for 12 years now. Eventually we have

managed

to achieve what our neighbours Norway did some time ago, " he added.

 

Environmentalists slammed the final compromise and said the plan to save

cod

was too little, too late, while the gradual subsidy trimming was only a

first step in the right direction. The EU will continue to grant aid for

scrapping vessels, as part of its long-term goal of trimming the overall

size of fleets. " Cod has been sacrificed for the sake of political

agreement, " said Julian Scola at the European Fisheries Campaign of the

World Wide Fund for Nature. " What the EU is doing is to allow that cod

could

become commercially extinct, " he told Reuters.

 

Scottish fishermen monitoring the marathon talks said entire communities

would be badly hit by the heavy quota cuts. They said the deal made

large

concessions to southern EU states but left Britain's fishing industry

stranded. " Scotland has got the worst deal in all of this. This is an

attempt to destroy the Scottish whitefish fleet, " said Alex Smith,

president

of Scotland's National Fishermen's Federation. " This will not achieve

what

they are trying to achieve, and that is the recovery of cod. They (the

Commission) have bought off everybody and the only people isolated now

are

the UK. "

 

British Fisheries Minister Elliot Morley said his government was looking

at

ways to help the fishing industry through the coming difficulties as a

matter of urgency. " Today's agreement will kickstart fish stock

recovery, "

he said in a statement. " Ministers have taken a tough decision now, so

that

the fishing industry has a long-term sustainable future after years of

stock decline.

 

( Reuters 23 Dec 2002)

----------------------

 

-2- UK:

 

*Vegetarian diet 'cuts heart risk' - The diet combines vegetables,

fruit

and nuts

 

Eating more vegetables and soya-based products may be as effective as

reducing cholesterol as medication. Researchers in Canada have

developed a

vegetarian combination diet which they say cuts cholesterol by almost a

third in just one month. The diet includes vegetables, such as

broccoli and red peppers; soy milk and soy sausages; oat bran cereal and

bread; and fruit and nuts. There is hope for a drug-free treatment for

some

people with high cholesterol

 

Prof David Jenkins

 

The researchers believe the food programme could be a possible drug-free

alternative to cutting cholesterol and protecting people from heart

disease.

Coronary heart disease kills more than 110,000 people a year in England.

A

major cause is cholesterol circulating in the bloodstream.

 

It has been known for many years that individually soy protein, nuts and

fibres like oats and barley can cut cholesterol by up to 7%. Professor

David

Jenkins and colleagues at the University of Toronto decided to test

whether

the impact was stronger if these foods were combined. They drew up a

seven-day food plan using foods that are commonly available in

supermarkets

and health stores.

 

A typical day on the diet included: A breakfast of soy milk, oat bran

cereal

with chopped fruit and almonds, oatmeal bread, vegetable-based margarine

and

jam; a lunch of soy cold cuts, oat bran bread, bean soup and fruit; and

a

stir-fry dinner with vegetables, tofu, fruit and almonds. The

researchers

put 13 people on the combination diet for a month. They found that their

cholesterol levels had dropped by 29% by the end of the period. The

researchers said the findings suggested the combination diet may be as

effective as statins. These drugs have been used extensively for 15

years to

treat patients with high levels of cholesterol. Professor Jenkins said

further and larger studies are needed before the diet could be

recommended

to patients. He said: " The take home message right now is that there is

hope

for a drug-free treatment for some people with high cholesterol. For us,

the

main feature now is to move this forward into longer-termstudies. " But

he

added: " This opens up the possibility that diet can be used much more

widely to lower blood cholesterol and possibly spare some individuals

from

having to take drugs. "

( BBC 15 Dec 2002)

 

** Famine can only be avoided if the rich give up meat, fish and dairy

 

The Christians stole the winter solstice from the pagans, and capitalism

stole it from the Christians. But one feature of the celebrations has

remained unchanged: the consumption of vast quantities of meat. The

practice used to make sense. Livestock slaughtered in the autumn, before

the

grass ran out, would be about to decay, and fat-starved people would

have to

survive a further three months. Today we face the opposite problem: we

spend

the next three months trying to work it off.

Our seasonal excesses would be perfectly sustainable, if we weren't

doing

the same thing every other week of the year. But, because of the rich

world's disproportionate purchasing power, many of us can feast every

day.

And this would also be fine, if we did not live in a finite world.

 

By comparison to most of the animals we eat, turkeys are relatively

efficient converters: they produce about three times as much meat per

pound

of grain as feedlot cattle. But there are still plenty of reasons to

feel

uncomfortable about eating them. Most are reared in darkness, so tightly

packed that they can scarcely move. Their beaks are removed with a hot

knife

to prevent them from hurting each other. As Christmas approaches, they

become so heavy that their hips buckle. When you see the inside of a

turkey

broilerhouse, you begin to entertain grave doubts about European

civilisation.

 

This is one of the reasons why many people have returned to eating red

meat

at Christmas. Beef cattle appear to be happier animals. But the

improvement

in animal welfare is offset by the loss in human welfare. The world

produces

enough food for its people and its livestock, though (largely because

they

are so poor) some 800 million are malnourished. But as the population

rises,

structural global famine will be avoided only if the rich start to eat

less

meat. The number of farm animals on earth has risen fivefold since 1950:

humans are now outnumbered three to one. Livestock already consume half

the

world's grain, and their numbers are still growing almost exponentially.

 

This is why biotechnology - whose promoters claim that it will feed the

world - has been deployed to produce not food but feed: it allows

farmers to

switch from grains which keep people alive to the production of more

lucrative crops for livestock. Within as little as 10 years, the world

will

be faced with a choice: arable farming either continues to feed the

world's

animals or it continues to feed the world's people. It cannot do both.

The

impending crisis will be accelerated by the depletion of both phosphate

fertiliser and the water used to grow crops. Every kilogram of beef we

consume, according to research by the agronomists David Pimental and

Robert

Goodland, requires around 100,000 litres of water. Aquifers are

beginning

the run dry all over the world, largely because of abstraction by

farmers.

 

Many of those who have begun to understand the finity of global grain

production have responded by becoming vegetarians. But vegetarians who

continue to consume milk and eggs scarcely reduce their impact on the

ecosystem. The conversion efficiency of dairy and egg production is

generally better than meat rearing, but even if everyone who now eats

beef

were to eat cheese instead, this would merely delay the global famine.

As

both dairy cattle and poultry are often fed with fishmeal (which means

that

no one can claim to eat cheese but not fish), it might, in one respect,

even

accelerate it. The shift would be accompanied too by a massive

deterioration

in animal welfare: with the possible exception of intensively reared

broilers and pigs, battery chickens and dairy cows are the farm animals

which appear to suffer most.

 

We could eat pheasants, many of which are dumped in landfill after

they've

been shot, and whose price, at this time of the year, falls to around £2

a

bird, but most people would feel uncomfortable about subsidising the

bloodlust of brandy-soaked hoorays. Eating pheasants, which are also fed

on

grain, is sustainable only up to the point at which demand meets supply.

We

can eat fish, but only if we are prepared to contribute to the collapse

of

marine ecosystems and - as the European fleet plunders the seas off West

Africa - the starvation of some of the hungriest people on earth. It's

impossible to avoid the conclusion that the only sustainable and

socially

just option is for the inhabitants of the rich world to become, like

most of

the earth's people, broadly vegan, eating meat only on special occasions

like Christmas.

 

As a meat-eater, I've long found it convenient to categorise veganism as

a

response to animal suffering or a health fad. But, faced with these

figures,

it now seems plain that it's the only ethical response to what is

arguably

the world's most urgent social justice issue. We stuff ourselves, and

the

poor get stuffed.

(The Guardian - 24 Dec 2002 - Geroge Monbiot - www.monbiot.com

- sent to us by Maxwell Lee )

 

*** From Nitin Mehta

The following letter was published in the Independent on Friday 20th.

Dec.

2002

 

Feed the world

Sir: It is a wonderful gesture on the part of The Independent staff to

raise

money for the famine in parts of Africa. We in Europe also need to make

lifestyle changes as part of a long-term solution to the problem of

starvation.

At present 38 per cent of all grain grown in the world is feed to the

animals. Food that can feed human beings is diverted to feed animals. A

staggering 47.9bn animals were killed for food in 2001. Poor countries

are

also using up fertile land to grow animal fodder to feed animals raised

for

slaughter in Europe. The amount of soy fed to animals in the US could

feed

the whole populations of India and China. Deforestation, pollution of

the

world's waterways, acid rain and a host of other problems can be avoided

if

mankind weaned itself off a meat diet.

Nitin Mehta

 

------------------------------

 

-3- Gambia: Lifeline for Biodiversity

 

Biodiversity is the great variety of life on earth. It gives us the

foods we

eat, the medicines we rely on to stay in the pink and the natural beauty

which are a delight to the eyes and heightens our creativity. Conserving

this diversity is one of the greatest challenges facing mankind today.

Every

surviving population of plants and animals, no matter how small or

imperiled, offers at some hope for the future. A clear understanding of

extinction risk is needed to actualize that hope.

 

This is what the World Conservation Union (IUCN) Red List of Threatened

Species sets out to provide. For many, the most remarkable features of

life

on earth are its endless, extraordinary, overwhelming variety.There are

other corals that glow in the dark, ants that farm fungi and fish that

electrocute their prey; marvels of creation, they excite, amuse,

inspire,

and bewilder. But the magnificent colour palette of earth's biodiversity

is

fading.

 

As species are pushed to extinction at many times the natural rate,

there is

more at stake than aesthetics. Human lives and livelihoods (so

intimately

connected with biological resources) are becoming permanently

impoverished.

The human future is being sacrificed to thoughtless exploitation and

short-term gain, as key habitants are bulldozed, fragmented, and

degraded.

The ecosystems are destabilized by climate change, pollution, invasive

species, and other direct human impacts.A veritable army of conservation

professionals and dedicated naturalists of the IUCN Species Survival

Commission (SSC) is working to observe and document the effects of these

activities on species and eco-systems.

 

The information they collect is a priceless one, if it is to be used

effectively. Thus, it must be collect, analyzed and the results

communicated

to everyone from decision makers to the general public. This is the job

of

the IUCN Red List Threatened Species. The Red List is based on

information

supplied and processed by the SSC's vast network of volunteers across

the

world, be they experts on plants, birds, mammals, fish, reptiles,

amphibians

or invertebrates; government officials, botanic garden and zoo

employees,

wildlife researchers, or protected area managers. They belong to one or

more

of the SSC's 110 specialist groups on species from elephants to orchids,

crocodiles to medicinal plants.

 

According to Craig Hilton - Taylor, the Red List Officer for the IUCN

species programme, these specialist groups convene workshops, undertake

field projects, raise funds for and carry out research, publish action

plans

designed to protect

key species, provide scientific advice to conservation organisation,

government agencies and IUCN members. Collectively they are the world's

single greatest source of information on species and their conservation

needs.

 

The Red List is no less than the world's most comprehensive and

authoritative inventory of the global conservation status of plants and

animals. It is also a method of gathering information that brings

objectivity and rigour to the classification of species according to

their

extinction risk.

 

Above all, the Red List is a wake-up call to all of us. By working

together,

we can help preserve what remains of the earth's treasurable colour and

variety.

(The Independent (Banjul) 27 Dec, 2002 - allAfrica.com -

http://allafrica.com/stories/200212270475.html)

 

--------

 

-4- Japan: Bean me down, Scottie, bean me down

 

By ROWAN HOOPER

 

" I don't think the human race will survive the next 1,000 years, unless

we

spread into space. There are too many accidents that can befall life on

a

single planet. But I'm an optimist. We will reach out to the stars. " So

said

cosmologist Stephen Hawking last year.

 

Optimist or not, it is clear there are many formidable hurdles to clear

before we will be able to live for extended periods away from Earth. It

may

take centuries before we have truly colonized space, but the prospect --

especially after the Space Shuttle Atlantis returned to Earth last week

--

no longer belongs to science fiction. A fundamental challenge is to find

a

way of growing food in space. When Atlantis touched down, it carried

with it

seedpods from soybeans that had been planted and nurtured, which then

germinated, developed into plants and flowered -- all in space. It is

the

first time that a major crop has completed its growth cycle, from

planting

seeds to growing new seeds, in space.

 

Space poses huge and unique challenges to biotechnicians. Can a seed

germinate and grow properly in microgravity? How can water and nutrients

be

delivered to a plant in conditions of weightlessness? Will genes that

evolved over millions of years on Earth work properly in space?

 

Previous experiments have been described as " crude. " The research

initiative, which took 97 days and was conducted aboard the

International

Space Station, demonstrates that crop production can be accomplished in

space. The final frontier -- a long-term human presence in space -- is a

little bit closer. Soybeans are undoubtedly a major crop, one of the

most-consumed foods in the world. The world's largest seed company,

Pioneer,

is the brand leader in soybeans, with more than 100 product varieties on

the

market.It was Pioneer soybeans that came back with Atlantis. The beans

grew

in a specialized tray within a growth chamber developed by the

Wisconsin

Center for Space Automation and Robotics -- a NASA Commercial Space

Center

at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

 

" This was an incredible scientific opportunity for us and our partners, "

said Tom Corbin, a researcher on the project. " Studying the effects of

soybean plants grown in space will help us expand our knowledge of

soybeans

and facilitate continued improvement of soybean germ plasm for farmers. "

 

Now the soybeans and seeds are on Earth, Pioneer and WCSAR scientists

will

analyze them to determine if the space-grown beans have genes for

improved

oil, protein, carbohydrates or secondary metabolites that could benefit

farmers and consumers. That information will then be used to improve the

soybeans' efficiency and profitability for farmers. And, of course, to

increase sales for Pioneer -- experiments conducted in space are not

ceap.

The success will encourage NASA research on " advanced life-support "

technologies for sustaining human colonies on Mars and elsewhere in

space.

 

Earlier this year, Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind., received

$10

million to lead the NASA Specialized Center of Research and Training for

Advanced Life Support. The center's director, Cary Mitchell, said they

will

develop " biospheres " -- self-sustaining environments that will be

essential

for future space colonies. Researchers from Alabama A & M University in

Normal, Ala., and Howard University in Washington, D.C., will work with

Purdue scientists. " Although there have been differences in emphasis

among

the three centers, " said Mitchell, " they are all working toward the same

goal: that of enabling self-sustaining human colonization of planetary

surfaces beginning during the late second or early third decades of the

21st

century.

 

" The human inhabitants [of biospheres] are going to be eating mainly a

vegetarian diet, " Mitchell continued. " They are going to have a lot of

crop

waste -- roots, stems, leaves, things you don't eat. Microbes will

digest

these wastes with natural enzymes. " Another Purdue scientist, Richard

Vierling, will also have been encouraged by last week's beans from

space.

Vierling arranged for former astronaut and U.S. Sen. John Glenn to

conduct

microgravity experiments on soybean seedlings during his 1998 Space

Shuttle

Discovery mission. Those experiments, which tested whether DNA transfer

could be conducted in microgravity, proved not only that it could be

done,

but also that it was more successful and efficient than DNA transfers

in a

control group on Earth. Of the soybean seedlings from that first space

experiment, 9 percent exhibited the trait introduced. On Earth, less

than 1

percent of the control group showed the trait. " Genes were transferred

more

efficiently to targeted cells in space than on Earth. The results were

so

significant we're going to improve our experiemnts and try them again, "

Vierling said.

 

So the prognosis is good. If plants can grow in space, if a life form

that

evolved on Earth can flourish off it, then we have made a small step

toward

the colonization of space and have every reason to be as optimistic as

Hawking. After all, as the Russian physicist Konstantin Tsiolkovsky

(1857-1935) said: " Earth is the cradle of humanity, but one cannot

remain in

the cradle forever. "

 

(The Japan Times: 1 Nov, 2002)

 

----------

 

-5- India:

 

" Vegetarian Kerala'' in 10 years

Thiruvananthapuram: A 47-day long vehicle jatha will be taken out from

Guruvayur on Sunday as part of the campaign for ''Vegetarian Kerala and

Meatless Bharat in ten years " .

 

Organised jointly by the Kerala Unit of the ''Indian Vegetarian

Congress''

and the ''Kerala Animal Lovers' Association,'' the campaign would be led

by

journalist and Kerala Animal Lovers Association President A V Krishnan

Moosad. Moosad said in a statement here on Friday that the jatha would

cover the northern districts of Kerala, Mangalore, Sringeri, Dharmasala,

Udipi, Mookambika, Goa, and many places in Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu

and

Pondicherry. Printed pamphlets against cruelty to living creatures and

on

evils of non-vegetarianism and its impact on health would be distributed

during the several meetings to be held as part of the campaign.

 

(Kerala News 15-Dec 2002 )

 

--------

-6- Veggie links and websites:

 

*from Gobal Hunger Alliance: Global Hunger Alliance: Please take a

moment to

visit the new and improved Global Hunger Alliancewebsite for vital

information about meat production and consumption as causes of world

hunger.

Our Archives section has been updated and expanded to include many more

readings on related topics: www.globalhunger.net/archives.html

Pattrice le-Muire Jones - Coordinator - Global Hunger Alliance -

http://www.globalhunger.net

 

**from bunny: Christian Vegetarian Association web site: Hi All, Here

is

the URL for the web site of the Christian Vegetarian Association. This

is a

nice site about Christianity, vegetarianism and animals including

writings

by Steve Kaufman M.D. and Rev Dr Andrew Linzey and more. A very

appropriate

site to read if you are a Christian consideringbecoming a vegetarian.

http://www.christianveg.com

 

*** UK: Sermon for Animals :

http://www.aswa.org.uk/docs/jonessermon.pdf

 

**** Recipes Galore :

IVU and EVU joint venture project.

http://www.veg-r.org/veg-r_temp.php -

http://www.veg-r.org/recipes/search.php

 

from: Susan Roghair - EnglandGal - Animal Rights Online,

President -

http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/1395/

http://www.abbeysvegetarianrecipes.com/

http://amacord.com/taste/

http://www.all-creatures.org/recipes.html

http://southernfood.tqn.com/library/crock/blveg.htm

http://www.foodweb.com/virtualcookbook/vegrecipes.html

http://www.webvalue.net/recipes/

http://web.mit.edu/vsg/Recipes

http://www.catteacorner.com/recipes.htm

http://www.peta.org/liv/recipe.html

http://www.vegweb.com/food/

http://www.boutell.com/vegetarian/index.html

http://www.soymilkmaker.com/

http://www.vegkitchen.com/

http://www.boutell.com/vegetarian/gravy.html

http://www.travelguides.com/bandb/recipes/vegetarian.html

http://www.vegweb.com/

http://www.eatsleepcode.com/vegwr/archive.html

http://www.vrg.org/recipes/

http://www.living-foods.com/recipes/almondmilk.html

http://vegetarian.miningco.com/home/food/vegetarian/library/holidays/blh

ostv

eg

http://www.happycow.net/

http://www.gentlehealer.com/

http://www.imagegypsy.com/orgprr.htm

http://www.pcrm.org/health/Recipes/

http://www.jewishvegan.com/recipes.html

http://www.veganrecipes.com/

http://www.veganchef.com/

http://home.teleport.com/~noelvn/vegan/vegan_cooking.html

http://www.vegparadise.com/recipeindex.html

http://www.veganoutreach.org/starterpack/recipes.html

http://www.vegancooking.com/links.htm

http://www.vegdining.com/Home.cfm

-------------------

 

-7- Vegetarian Diary

JANUARY

17-19 Jan - Germany - Wiesbaden - Paracelsusmesse

(stand and speeches by Vegetarier Bund Deutschlands e.V.

http://www.vegetarierbund.de/ )

 

FEBRUARY

6-7 Feb - Netherlands, The Hague - Changing Dimensions of the Food

Economy,

conference organised by AGR and the government of the Netherlands.

http://www.oecd.org/EN/document/0,,EN-document-notheme-4-no-20-35999-0,0

0.ht

ml

AGR:

http://www.oecd.org/EN/about/0,,EN-about-notheme-4-no-no-no-0,00.html

 

13-16 Feb - Germany - Nürnberg - Fair Bio-Fach

(weltgrößte Naturkost- und Naturwarenmesse)

 

MARCH

All month UK - Veggie Month Campaigning - Animal Aid -

http://www.animalaid.org.uk/

 

16 Mar - Belgium - Antwerp: V-Day²

In January 2002, EVA organised for the very first time V-Day: the Day

of

Vegetarianism. Hundreds of people had the opportunity to taste

vegetarian

products, attend lectures and workshops, and enjoy an extensive

vegetarian

dinner. V-Day was mentioned in the press many times and was attended by

about 750 visitors. The event was also supported by many food companies

and

organisations. V-Day² will be held on 16th March 2003 in Antwerp

(Stuurboord). It will be the biggest vegetarian event ever held in

Benelux,

and will be a must for anyone who is interested in the vegetarian way of

life. Also non-vegetarians with an interest in healthy and honest food

will

be very welcome. For the event we have chosen a very spacious, modern

location with a wonderful view of the river Schelde, in the centre of

Antwerp. V-Day² will include lectures and workshops and, in addition,

there

will be room for 700m² of commercial and information booths. At night,

there

will be a classy dinner for 250 people. We are aiming for an audience of

2,000 people and will try to use this opportunity to show vegetarianism

at

its best through as much media coverage as possible. More up to date

information on V-Day²: www.vegetarian.be/vday2

 

20 Mar - USA/international - MEATOUT -visit www.meatout.org

 

20-23 Mar - Germany - Stuttgart - Well-Viva-Messe (stand and speeches

Vegetarier Bund Deutschlands- http://www.vegetarierbund.de/)

 

27 Mar, 19 h - UK - London - Launch of an animated " Anancy " film - The

film, which will extol the virtues of a non-meat diet, is to be launched

in

The " Pod " in The Peckham Library, in Peckham Sq, off of Peckham High

St,

London, SE15 - free vegetarian/vegan food and drink will be available,

along with musical entertainment. Free film copies will be distributed

on

the night. - Details: zalikauk

 

29 Mar - UK - VIVA! National Day of Action Against the Farrowing Crate

VIVA!, 12 Queen Square, Brighton, E Sussex, BN1 3FD - info

 

APRIL

28-29 Apr - France - Paris - OECD Forum

http://www.oecd.org/EN/document/0,,EN-document-593-17-no-20-34768-0,00.h

tml

Announcing OECD Forum 2003 The OECD Forum is a multi-stakeholder

consultation that provides the opportunity for representatives of

business,

labour, civil society and the general public to discuss and debate with

government ministers the key issues on the agenda of the OECD annual

Ministerial Council Meeting

 

MAY

 

17 May - Germany - Hannover - 111 Jahre Vegetarier-Bund Deutschlands

Vegetarier-Bund Deutschlands e.V., Blumenstr. 3, 30159 Hannover

Tel. 00 49 511-363 2050, Fax 00 49 511-363 2007 -

info

 

19-20 - Global Forum on Agriculture, organised by AGR.

http://www.oecd.org/EN/home/0,,EN-home-673-12-no-no-no-0--no-,00.html

 

19-25 May - UK - National Vegetarian Week

http://www.oecd.org/EN/about/0,,EN-about-notheme-4-no-no-no-0,00.html

SEVEN DAYS OF SATISFACTION - NATIONAL VEGETARIAN WEEK 2003

National Vegetarian Week 2003 will run from 19 to 25 May. The Vegetarian

Society invites you to spring into action and take part in the seven day

veggie challenge.

Starting from seven basic recipes, the Society is encouraging the media,

schools, supermarkets, consumers, caterers and eateries to create their

own

variations according to factors of taste, budget and style. Each of our

basic dishes is simple, tasty and cheap to prepare, with lots of room

for

embellishment. We hope that this challenge will inspire food editors and

cookery writers to compete with each other to produce the tastiest twist

-

or run their own readers competitions. A great story for a feature, The

Vegetarian Society wants to show that cooking vegetarian food is both

straightforward and unlimited in scope. Whether you've a taste for

traditional British fare or far-flung foreign flavours, vegetarian food

really can satisfy everybody.

National Vegetarian Week 2002 received enormous media and consumer

interest - don't miss the opportunity to make a meal of it in 2003. A

press

pack containing the seven core recipes, information about sponsors as

well

as food and editorial ideas will be available from the Vegetarian

Society

Press Office in January. If member societies of EVU would also like to

become involved and make the week an international event VSUK would be

happy to provide copies of our recipes, press releases and other

material to

assist , and you may also adapt the material to suit yourself provided

the

society is credited.

Further information is available on our website at www.vegsoc.org.

Please contact Tina Fox on tina if you would like to be

involved.

 

24.5.-1.6., 110 Jahre Eden-Genossenschaft, Oranienburg bei Berlin

(ehemals vegetarische Siedlung, zentrale Festveranstaltung am 28.5.)

info Vegetarier-Bund Deutschlands e.V., Blumenstr. 3, 30159 Hannover

Tel. 00 49 511-363 2050, Fax 00 49 511-363 2007 -

info

 

27-30 May - Russia, Moscow: First International Specialized

Fair Festival " Vegetarian World " - Moscow

Skolniki Culture and Exhibition Center. further details e-mail:

evs-ru

 

28 May - 1 Jun - Germany - Berlin Ökumenischer Kirchentag

(stand and speeches Vegetarier Bund Deutschlands-

http://www.vegetarierbund.de/)

 

31 May - 1 Jun - UK - Tonbridge - ANIMAL RIGHTS ACTIVIST GATHERING 2003

-

Come along and learn campaigning and activist techniques. Workshops we

hope

to include will be fundraising, media relations, the law, first aid for

animals, starting a sanctuary, designing leaflets and posters, video and

photography techniques. If you would like to help run a workshop

please

let us know - this can only be as informative and worthwhile as they

effort

YOU put in. ACCOMMODATION; Free basic camping PARTY; on the Sunday

evening

to celebrate Farmed Animal Action's 1st birthday Farmed Animal Action,

PO

Box 27, Tonbridge, Kent TN12 5WJ 00 44 845 4560284

www.farmedanimalaction.co.uk - info

 

-----

 

If you have not done so, why not become member of the European

Vegetarian

Union now. It is so easy: http://www.european-vegetarian.org/608.0.html

 

 

 

 

 

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