Australia PM demands Pakistan probe sheep slaughter

Australian farmers urged against any consequent ban on the live export trade.


Afp November 06, 2012
Australia PM demands Pakistan probe sheep slaughter

SYDNEY: Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard demanded on Tuesday that Pakistan investigate and explain the brutal killing of 21,000 Australian sheep in Karachi, a slaughter officials have described as appalling.

The shipment of Australian sheep was sent to the port city after being turned away by Bahrain, with Pakistan livestock officials ordering them to be culled over disease concerns.

Graphic footage of their slaughter was aired by ABC's Four Corners programme on Monday, including images of a man sawing at a sheep's neck before throwing it into a bloody trench.

Other sheep were bulldozed into the pit after being killed last month, but some were seen the next morning still breathing, sparking angry condemnation of their treatment.

Gillard said that she had spoken to Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf at a summit of European and Asian leaders in Laos to express her concern.

"I did raise with the prime minister of Pakistan my concern about the graphic and very cruel images we've seen of the treatment of Australian sheep," she told reporters in Vientiane.

"I explained to him that Australians are distressed to see these acts of cruelty and that I wanted the matter investigated,” she said.

"He undertook to investigate the matter ... I was very clear about Australia's concerns, very strong in raising those concerns and very clear that this is something that has distressed the Australian people."

Australia Agriculture Minister Joe Ludwig earlier called the slaughter "appalling" and his department disputed that the sheep were unhealthy.

"We do not know the reasoning behind the Pakistan authority's decision to cull the sheep in Pakistan or their choice of the method used," the agriculture ministry said.

"We continue to hold that both the decision and the method used were unnecessary."

Livestock officials ordered the sheep to be culled after they tested positive for salmonella and actinomyces bacteria.

Although samples from the sheep were sent to a British laboratory and came back clean, clearing the meat for human consumption, municipal officials in Karachi rejected the tests.

Australian farmers urged against any consequent ban on the live export trade, saying significant improvements had been made in regulating Australia's live export market since a controversy in Indonesia last year.

Canberra suspended live cattle exports to Indonesia for a month last year after a television documentary revealed mistreatment inside its abattoirs, only reinstating the trade under a strict new licensing system.

Australia's National Farmers Federation said "decisive action" had been taken to temporarily suspend exports of sheep to Pakistan and Bahrain while investigations were carried out.

The farming lobby group stressed that Australia was a world leader in animal treatment in exports and warned that banning the trade would see welfare standards fall.

"If Australia was to stop exporting livestock, global animal welfare standards would unquestionably decline," it said.

Australia's live export trade is worth about US$1 billion a year and employs thousands of people.

COMMENTS (20)

Yehonala | 12 years ago | Reply

The Australian has reported that "Exporter Wellard yesterday conceded for the first time that "in hindsight" some of its decisions might have "contributed to the cull" in Pakistan. This included not telling Pakistan the sheep had already been rejected by Bahrain. Wellard maintains however the rejection was not the reason why local authorities triggered the cull."

It is very interesting to note that the Australians are almost exclusively focusing on issues of humane treatment of those sheep, much more than on their being tested positive by livestock officials for the salmonella and actinomyces bacteria.

If the Australians are so concerned about their sheep they are most welcome to take them back and feed them to their own people and refund. If they don't like this culling, they shouldn't export diseased animals in the first place! Raja Pervez Ashraf should have invited Julia Gillard to a lavish dinner where her entire delegation would be fed with those sheep.

It is very strange that White people would be so appalled by the alleged brutal treatment of farm animals but cheer worse brutalities committed by their own governments and armies against human beings of other races during savage wars of aggresstion aimed at grabbing their natural resources as well as during proxy terrorism sponsored by rulers they vote into office.

s shah | 12 years ago | Reply

@asad, @Faisal, agree with you. This was horrific and disgusting barbarity and shows how low we have fallen as a country. Mullahs are too busy spreading hate to have time to condemn this slaughter. People should beware of the "budd duas" of innocent people and innocent animals.

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