End this Hideous Cruelty!!

Bound at their feet, they are forced to watch their mates die slowly and painfully in front of them.

One by one, they squirm and writhe in agony as a blunt knife saws back and forth across their throats.

Their scream-like bellows of suffering sound almost human and fill the Indonesian abattoir until just one is left standing.

 The last of the cattle trembles violently. He knows his fate, but is helpless to avoid the same slow and painful demise.

He shakes uncontrollably – his fear is palpable – and it’s as if his heart stops before they even begin making the first cruel cut.

Sitting on the couch, I was writhing and squirming too watching the hideous scenes unfold on last week’s Four Corners program feeling shocked, outraged and emotional.

And the next day the response is incredible – it’s no longer just those “animal-loving Greenies” calling for a ban on live exports, but Australians across the board; from city dwellers to cattle farmers themselves, united in outrage after witnessing some of the most confronting scenes ever seen on Australian TV.

On talkback radio switchboards lit up as caller after caller expressed anger and resentment, confusion, disbelief and sadness on behalf of literally millions of Australian animals who are crowded onto bulk carriers to face a gruesome death in horrifyingly painful and inhumane circumstances.

And they have many questions: how can this happen? Why does it happen? And why is nothing being done to stop it?

For the live export industry, at least, the writing may at last be on the wall.

The message is out there in the mainstream media: overseas abattoirs cannot be trusted to kill Australian cattle humanely.

But the problem stretches further than Indonesia and the killing of cattle and the Government needs to get real about that. These animals might have left our shores, but that does not mean we are suddenly devoid of all responsibility.

Whilst millions of cattle and sheep are sent off on one last terminal voyage, the jobs of Australian meat workers are exported as well.

With each shipload sent thousands of miles away to face an abominably cruel fate, Aussie jobs are likewise sacrificed.

Last year alone 1000 jobs were lost in Australia and the Meatworkers Union say the live export trade is a major contributor.

The chilled meat industry is already worth triple the live export trade, so growing the chilled, frozen and processed meat export trade will only create jobs, value add onshore and maintain economic viability for producers.

It is time to look to win-win solutions and recognise the economic benefits banning the live export trade will have.

Let’s invest in the economic opportunities for Australian workers and stop the cruelty.

It is my great hope that Australians of all political and religious persuasions will unite in supporting a ban on the live exportation of all animals.

Tomorrow I’ll be introducing a motion calling on the South Australian Government to play its part in stopping this cruel and despicable trade. Let’s hope the Rann Government not only watched the Four Corners program, but recognise that this problem stretches further afield than Indonesia, yet the solution can start here at home with us.

Join the National Day of Action to End Live Exports rally in your capital city. The SA event will be held outside Parliament House, North Tce, Adelaide from noon.

3 Comments (+add yours?)

  1. Sharon Hutchings
    Jun 08, 2011 @ 13:19:31

    Well said Tammy, and on behalf of the millions of voiceless animals, thank you. Wonderful to see ethical politicians like you and others pushing for a total ban and calling our Governments to account for the misery and suffering they continue to support.

    I’ve been following this issue for over a decade now and the Four Corners program footage was certainly the most disturbing I’ve seen. This would have been extremely confronting for many people who have possibly never even seen the inside of an Australian abattoir let alone an Indonesian one. The live export trade is an industry that is inherently cruel and must be banned by the Australian Government. After decades of deliberate greed and ignorance driven cruelty to millions of animals, they have an ethical obligation to stop it now.

    However, I do also believe that our school curriculum should include mandatory tours of slaughterhouses so that children, teachers and parents could witness the truth behind their next meal. A really positive ramification of that could be a decrease in meat consumption and production, or better still an increase in vegetarianism – better for the environment, human health and the animals.

    Non-violence leads to the highest ethics, which is the goal of all evolution. Until we stop harming all other living beings, we are still savages. ~Thomas A. Edison

    Reply

  2. mike wallis-smith
    Jun 09, 2011 @ 17:56:08

    It is great to see action being taken by the Greens and others to stop the current practices and to to ban the export of live cattle. There is no excuse to profit when it involves cruelty and inhuman treatment to any animals .Looking the other way or incompetant monitoring is no excuse in the long run. It would also be sensible to look at a range of economic options for producers and exporters and to provide financial incentives to assist with a reasonable transition period. However the ban on the export of live cattle should be ongoing. A comprehensive investigation into all aspects of the live cattle trade with recommendations for the future should be undertaken with the Greens able to comment on the recommendations before the report is finalised.

    Reply

  3. Lili Ochota
    Jun 08, 2012 @ 18:29:14

    What disturbs me knowing and seeing what goes on during slaughter without stunning the animal first, ie Halal and also Kosher slaughter, is that our government both State and Federal allow this to happen in Australia.

    Our government does not mandate stunning and allows for religious ritual killing of animals in Australia. Our government has allowed some animals, not to be protected & to be cruelly treated. They have gone against the scientific advice of the national vet. for a small religious minority in Australia as well as for exported meat. using Halal slaughter methods.
    It angers me that Australian laws and regulations are compromised for export profit as well as for a religious minority.
    I would have thought that Halal/Kosher meat could be imported to Australia for the religious minority, but that our laws and regulations as well as the welfare of our animals remains sacrosanct.
    Why is our Australian government so ready to compromise our standards, laws and regulations?
    Religious freedom is to be respected, but there are other ways to overcome these differences and not compromise our standards and laws.

    Reply

Leave a comment