Guest guest Posted October 23, 2003 Report Share Posted October 23, 2003 http://www.peta.org/news/NewsItem.asp?id=3073 PETA TAKES PROTEST OVER SEA-STRANDED SHEEP STRAIGHT TO AUSTRALIAN EMBASSY Group Demands Intervention to Stop Suffering, End Live-Animal Exports For Immediate Release: October 17, 2003 Contact: Bruce Friedrich 757-622-7382 Washington — Holding signs reading, " Give Them Sanctuary or Give Them Death, " members of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) from various countries will gather to protest the tragic plight of more than 50,000 sheep who were shipped to the Middle East from Australia and have been stranded—and dying—at sea for more than two months, after Saudi Arabia refused to accept them because of allegations of disease. Thousands of the sheep have died from high temperatures. PETA will deliver a letter to the Australian ambassador, calling on him to urge his government to immediately intervene and give the animals sanctuary or to order that the animals be euthanized. PETA’s plea to the Australian minister for agriculture, fisheries, and forestry in early September, asking him to intervene, was ignored. Monday, October 20 Time: 8:30-9:30 a.m. Place: The Australian Embassy, 1601 Massachusetts Ave. N.W. Of the 57,000 sheep who were loaded onto the ship Cormo Express in Australia in August, more than 5,000 have died, and they continue to suffer and die in the blistering Middle Eastern heat. News sources state that the animals are packed three to a square meter. The Australian government has imposed a temporary ban on sheep exports to Saudi Arabia, but PETA says that the measure is merely cosmetic and doesn’t go nearly far enough. This is not the first time that animals have suffered at the hands of the Australian live-export trade. Every year, millions of Australian sheep are subjected to the horrors of being shipped vast distances on ships where death, injury, and illness are everyday realities. A scientific study of one such shipment from the region found that sheep died from illness, starvation, pneumonia, dehydration, and trauma and that many died of suffocation after losing their footing and being smothered by others. Many of the animals became stuck in accumulated excrement and were unable to move. " The intense suffering of these sheep and the shame it has brought upon Australia are reason enough to ban live-animal exports permanently, " says PETA Bruce Friedrich. " Live-animal shipments always mean misery for the animals, but this time, the whole world is watching. " For more information, please visit PETA’s Web site PETA.org. The New with improved product search Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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