Horse News

Market for Horse Meat Evaporates in Europe

News Release from Animal’s Angels

When Shown the Bloody Truth, Europeans are Sickened by Cruel Horse Slaughter

(Wyoming Rep. “Slaughterhouse” Sue Wallis and her traveling partner Montana Rep. “Red” Ed Butcher must be troubled in their sleep, tonight (finally).  They had high hopes of developing a bloody market for the sale of the flesh of America’s horses, both wild and domestic, to European markets for human consumption.   But after the big drug expose’ and now the truth hitting the European airwaves it appears that the harbingers of equine murder will be forced to crawl back under the slimy rocks from whence they came.  It’s about blinking time – R.T.)

Belgian and Dutch consumers were shocked to learn of widespread horse slaughter-related cruelty in North and South America. Undercover video footage aired on three major news programs showed horses designated for slaughter are routinely starved, dehydrated, injured and abused.

Horse meat is commonly available in Belgium and the Netherlands where consumers are almost completely unaware of the cruelties of horse slaughter. Most believe what suppliers claim on their websites, that the meat on their dinner plate comes from contented, grass-eating, healthy horses. The story begins by asking, “Do they [consumers] really know where it comes from?

The 8½ minute news segment was produced by GAIA, a respected animal welfare organization from Belgium, with much of the footage provided by Animals’ Angels USA. The dire conditions of horses at slaughter plants, feedlots and markets in Mexico, Brazil and the U.S., have generated talk of boycotts and moratoriums on the import of horse meat from these countries.

Viewers are told “Cruelty goes hand in hand with incompetence”, as undercover video shows a worker knowingly crushing the lower leg of a live horse as he forces the iron gate of an overcrowded trailer shut.

An English version of the story is available on youtube:

Consumers responding on television websites demanded action. “They [importers] told us the meat is of superior quality because the animals live a life of luxury and freedom on green pastures…well cared for with plenty of food. But it’s a horrible lie.”

On importer Chevideco’s website, horses are said to be treated with respect and to live without stress. An accompanying photograph depicts well-proportioned horses standing knee deep in grass. Importer such as Visser & van Walsum make similar claims.

Within hours of the story’s broadcast, supermarkets responded with promises to investigate. Delhaize, the second largest retailer in Belgium asked their supplier to remove affected meat from their shelves. Two other major grocers have told consumers they do not import horse meat from outside Europe.

Fenavian, the Federation of Meat Producers in Belgium, issued a response denying any wrongdoing and offering reassurances that adherence to safety and European Union animal welfare rules were standard practice.

“However, the evidence is quite overwhelming,” said Sonja Meadows, president of Animals Angels U.S.  “Up until recently, officials may have been able to claim that to their knowledge, the animals were treated properly. But now such claims are quite obviously false. Unfortunately we have plenty of documentation to prove that animals caught up in the horse slaughter pipeline are horribly abused.”

Animals’ Angels’ began focusing efforts on the issue of European consumers’ awareness about horse slaughter in November 2009 after meeting with the European Commission. AA shared with committee members evidence of extreme cruelty uncovered at Mexican horse slaughter plants, U.S. feedlots and government export facilities. AA filed an official complaint with the commission soon after the meeting.

Last month Gaia asked Animals’ Angels for footage from Mexico and the U.S. to help with a European campaign to publicize the conditions endured by horses in the slaughter pipeline. Gaia had recently finished undercover investigations in South America and had gathered their own ample evidence of brutality.

Other organizations in the Netherlands and France are also launching consumer awareness campaigns. Most national and regional newspapers have published the story and photographs. Fueled by concerns from both consumers and animal welfare advocates, many more European news outlets are expected to pick up the story.

“I really doubt I’ll ever eat horse meat again,” said one man. “They may say they fixed the problem, but I’ll never trust them again.”

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16 replies »

  1. SOOOO Very exciting. FINALLY, a break for our dear 4 legged creatures!! This is fabulous & HUGE thanks to Animal Angels & all of the incredible work they do. If anyone has any spare change – I’m sure Animal Angels can use it!!

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  2. Thank you, Gaia, for revealing the inhumane reality behind the horse slaughter business. I work to rescue horses from East Coast kill pens by fundraising for them on Facebook, and I see every week that healthy, young horses are headed to slaughter. Pro-slaughter advocates in America claim that it is only the lame, disable and the old that go to slaughter. Another lie from an industry that has been misleading the public for years. How sad that more lies are being told by Belgian horsemeat importers. I hope Europeans wise up and stop eating or importing American horse meat–which is not only the product of extreme cruelty, but is also loaded with harmful drugs like bute and ivermectin.

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  3. Bravo, Animal Angels and GAIA! Now it’s time to get the truth out to the rest of the world. More videos, more languages, more targeting horse-eating countries around the world.

    That being said, we need to counter the pro-slaughter arguements point-for-point, and come up with workable alternatives.

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  4. Yes! I was shocked – can this be real? Actually happening? Finally, after ALL these years, the truth is finally out. Now, the Europeans need to know the truth about the contamination of American horse meat. I’m sure they didn’t know about THAT either.

    Way to GO! Thank you SO much, Animal Angels and GAIA!

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  5. It is heartening to know that at least some Europeans DO care about the welfare of horses. I am so glad for this exposure – people need to know the truth about the food they consume. They need to know that this occurs not only in South America, but in North America as well. And, they are eating contaminated horse meat imported from the US.

    Why isn’t this information being aired in the US? Americans have the right to know the truth also.

    Awesome job, thanks so much to AA and GAIA!

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  6. Humans are disgusting. I will be very selective about ALL products and food sources from now on.

    Thank you Animal Angels and Gaia.

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  7. YEAH and THANKS! How can we get this information aired in the U.S.A.? Start a fund to pay for advertising? Get some celebs to help by donating cash? I’ll donate cash or I could possibly hook up with a film making crew.

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  8. I have always said, shut down the market for horse meat in Europe and else where and you will stop it dead in its tracks. If the horse killers have no takers for the meat what are they going to do with it, pay to have it warehoused like whale meat in Japan? I don’t think so. I know in Eastern Europe Russian draft horses are bred like cattle just for slaughter. If people refused to buy it this would also go away. My mantra,”KILL THE MARKET”.

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  9. Horse meat is unfit for humans to eat.
    Association of phenylbutazone usage with horses bought for slaughter: A public health risk
    Food and Chemical Toxicology, Volume 48, Issue 5, May 2010, Pages 1270-1274
    Nicholas Dodman, Nicolas Blondeau, Ann M. Marini
    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6T6P-4YF5RB0-1&_user=10&_coverDate=05%2F31%2F2010&_alid=1317753422&_rdoc=1&_fmt=high&_orig=search&_cdi=5036&_sort=r&_docanchor=&view=c&_ct=4&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=2f8a2c55a559e5963d0f1e02b682319c

    Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs – prohibited as well Phenylbutazone, known as “bute,” is a veterinary drug only label-approved by the Food & Drug Administration for use by veterinarians in dogs and horses. It has been associated with debilitating conditions in humans and it is absolutely not permitted for use in food-producing animals. USDA/FSIS has conducted a special project to for this drug in selected bovine slaughter plants under federal inspection. An earlier pilot project by FSIS found traces less than 3% of the livestock selected for testing, sufficient cause for this special project. There is no tolerance for this drug in food-producing livestock, and they and their by-products are condemned when it is detected. Dairy producers must not use this drug in food-producing livestock and if it is found, those producers will be subject to FDA investigation and possible prosecution.
    http://www.saanendoah.com/prohibiteddrugs.html

    Horse Owner Survey Shows NSAID Use Trends
    by: Edited Press Release
    April 30 2009, Article # 14073

    In a recent survey, 96% of respondents said they used nonsteroidal
    anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) to control the joint pain and
    inflammation in horses, and 82% administer them without always
    consulting their veterinarian. More than 1,400 horse owners and trainers
    were surveyed to better understand attitudes toward NSAIDs, in a project
    sponsored by Merial, the maker of Equioxx (firocoxib).
    http://www.thehorse.com/ViewArticle.aspx?ID=14073

    99 percent of horses that started in California last year raced on bute, according to Daily Racing Form. Bute is banned in the United States and Canada for horses intended for the food chain. That’s a permanent ban.

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  10. what this movement needs is to hire an independent lab to pull meat from the markets and test for chemicals.

    There are many good labs that could be hired., The labs that test racehorses for drugs and test the olympic horses all seem good.

    Another market that needs independent testing is the pet food market. Seems these days the cancer rate in dogs is extremely high. I would like to see the results of tests on about 100 of the top selling animal foods. I don’t want even my dog to be exposed to those drugs common to horses.

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    • Agree – one way, to do right now (off topic), is to find a pet food outlet that has foods such as Soiid Gold (there are others too, don’t recall the names) that are not laced with chemicals and then let the chemical laced pet food suppliers know you are changing and why. It does cost a little more, but I figure pay now or pay the vet later for illness. Just like our own foods and supplies, chose organic, nitrate free and fragrance free personal supplies and cleaners – deoderants, soaps, body lotions, laundry detergent, etc. Assume all others are laced with chemcials unless they say they are not. Something I have learned is that frangrances, make up and hair dyes do not bind without chemcials and metals – so beware.

      My dogs have been on these foods for 4 years now. They were supposed to be dead, according to the vet, long ago. I have even reduced thier medications. I boarded them last year and they misplaced the food I provided. Their bodies smelled of chemicals for 3 days after I pciked them up – so much so that it made me physically ill.

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