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- Forwarded from the Greenpeace press office
-
- GREENPEACE ACTION AGAINST DESTRUCTIVE FISHING METHODS IN NORTH SEA
- ENTERS
- SECOND DAY
-
- Amsterdam, 5 March, 1997 -- Despite retaliation from trawlermen,
- Greenpeace activists in inflatable boats went back into action
- in the North Sea this morning and continued to challenge North
- Sea beam trawlers which use heavy chains to plough up the
- seabed.
-
- Four swimmers -- all experienced Greenpeace activists --
- confronted the Maria, a Dutch beam trawler fishing off the
- German coast, by swimming in front of the boat. Greenpeace
- first asked the trawlermen to stop using destructive chains to
- dig up the sea bed in order to catch plaice and sole, but they
- refused.
-
- Yesterday, while Greenpeace used non-violent methods to try to
- persuade the fishermen to stop using destructive chains, fire
- hoses were used on the activists and discarded debris and wooden
- blocks were thrown at the rubber boats during yesterday's
- action.
-
- "We understand that fishermen feel their livelihoods are at
- stake," said Greenpeace campaigner Just van den Broek. "But the
- livelihoods of all fishermen are at threat from destructive
- fishing practices. Beam trawlers which drag heavy chains through
- the sea bed are causing untold damage to marine life. For every
- kilo of marketable fish caught in this way up to six kilos of
- dead fish and invertebrates are thrown away."
-
- At least half the North Sea is regularly ploughed up by beam
- trawling chains. The method requires massive engine power from
- the trawlers. The seabed of the southern North Sea is the worst
- affected, with some areas being swept several times a year by
- beam trawls. Trawlers using this method come from coutnries
- including the United Kingdom, Germany and Belgium, but the
- majority are Dutch owned.
-
- In a week's time European environment and fisheries ministers
- get together at the Interim Ministerial Meeting (IMM) in Bergen
- to decide the fate of the North Sea. The last North Sea
- Conference in Esbjerg, Denmark, in 1995 agreed that fisheries
- needed urgent action and called the IMM in order to integrate
- environment and fisheries policy.
-
- "This meeting is the Environment ministers' chance to show that
- they are being taken seriously," said van den Broek.
- "Unfortunately the signs are that they are about to play second
- fiddle to the fisheries departments. If this happens, North Sea
- fisheries will be heading for the same fate as those off eastern
- Canada, where cod stocks have all but disappeared."
-
- ends
-
- For details of photographs and footage of the action contact:
- Anke Scheibe (footage) on 31 20 524 9543, Steve Morgan (photos)
- 31 20 524 9514
-
- For further information contact Peter Pueschel, Greenpeace
- Campaigner on board the MV Greenpeace on 49 172 381 8145; James
- Gillies, Press Officer, Greenpeace International, Amsterdam on
- 31 20 524 9548.
-
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 03:05:44 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] E coli warning 'was covered up'
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970306030606.0b0f5bf4@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Thurday, March 6th, 1997
-
- E coli warning 'was covered up'
- By George Jones and Joy Copley
-
-
- THE Government was plunged into a new row over food safety
- last night after allegations that the Ministry of Agriculture suppressed a
- damning report by its own hygiene inspectors warning that abattoirs
- were becoming breeding grounds for the E coli organism which has
- killed at least 20 people by food poisoning.
-
- The report exposed serious lapses of hygiene and warns of
- "major contamination" of carcasses by animal excrement. The allegations
- that the report was not published could lead to new demands for the
- resignation of Douglas Hogg, the Agriculture Minister, who last month
- survived a Commons censure motion on the Government's handling of the BSE
- crisis.
-
- Labour called for a Commons statement, claiming that if
- the report, which was prepared in 1995, had been made public, lives might
- have been saved in the recent E coli outbreak.
-
- The Ministry of Agriculture rejected as "nonsense" the
- allegation that the report had been suppressed. A spokesman said that it had
- been
- circulated to the meat industry and while it had not been published formally
- it was available to "members of the public who telephoned the
- Meat Hygiene Service".
-
- The report, Red Meat, leaked to the Financial Times,
- alleges that
- abattoirs were being contaminated by the admission of filthy animals for
- slaughter. It was drawn up by a government inspection team that visited
- every abattoir in Britain. According to the report, animal faeces that could
- harbour the E coli 0157 organism were finding their way on to carcasses
- being prepared for human consumption. "Major faecal contamination on the
- carcass, due to poor dressing practices, is a serious cause for concern," it
- says.
-
- "Dirty animals arriving at the abattoir are a case of further
- contamination; organisms such as escherichia 0157 and salmonella
- can be introduced into the plant on the skins of dirty livestock. Most
- plants have no formal procedure to clean up dirty stock." The inspectors
- recommended that a national policy should be devised to define unacceptable
- contamination and urged that dirty animals should be refused entry at all
- abattoirs.
-
- The Financial Times claimed members of the inspection team
- were encouraged by Ministry officials to water down the report because of
- the damage it would do to the meat industry. When they refused, a
- decision was apparently taken not to publish. It quoted Bill Swann, editor
- of the report, as saying that if its recommendations were fully implemented
- the risk from E coli would be much diminished.
-
- The Ministry tried to play down the significance of the report
- yesterday. A spokesman said a summary went to a Meat Hygiene Service
- Industry forum last June.
-
- The world's worst outbreak of E coli food poisoning began
- in Scotland at the beginning of winter. John Barr, the family butcher
- implicated in the outbreak, closed his shop in Wishaw, Lanarkshire. Three
- months later the epidemic had left 18 pensioners dead, while more than 400
- people had been taken ill.
-
- The Government ordered an inquiry and appointed a team of
- investigators, who tracked the source of the outbreak to bacteria found in
- the gravy and meat of pies produced by John Barr & Son in the Wishaw shop.
-
- Mr Barr, once voted best butcher in Scotland, was charged with
- culpable and reckless conduct in relation to the alleged supply of
- contaminated meat. At the end of last month he was allowed to re-open his
- shop, to a remarkable show of support and goodwill from customers.
-
- Last month, bereaved families formed Hush, a support group, to
- demand "full and honest disclosures" of actions by all parties involved in
- the tragedy, including Mr Barr, the Government, and health and
- environmental officials. Paul Santoni, solicitor for the families, said the
- number of dead and those still displaying symptoms - including children -
- served as "a gruesome and poignant reminder" of the need for legislation and
- justice.
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 03:05:47 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Beekeeping curb as pest hits hives
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970306030609.0b0fc730@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Thursday, March 6th, 1997
-
- Beekeeping curb as pest hits hives
- By David Brown, Agriculture Editor
-
-
-
- A BLOOD-sucking pest which attacks bees, threatening honey
- supplies, has spread to every county in England and Wales only five
- years after arriving in Britain, the Ministry of Agriculture said yesterday.
-
- It is now poised to cross into Scotland. The whole of
- England and Wales will be declared a Statutory Infected Area from tomorrow
- in the
- battle to control the parasite causing varroa disease which has swept
- through hives with remarkable speed. It will be an offence to move bees and
- hive frames containing honeycomb into and out of England and Wales except
- under licence.
-
- The parasite, which attacks adult bees and grubs, weakens
- colonies enormously and causes heavy losses of honey. It has spread across
- Europe from Russia and the Far East on infested bees and first
- appeared in Britain in April 1992 at an apiary at Torbay, Devon.
-
- Latest surveys in Cumbria and Greater Manchester have
- shown that 11 out of 101 apiaries were affected. Although none has been found
- in Northumberland so far, beekeepers are so sure it is there that they
- have asked for controls to be extended along the full length of the
- Scottish border. Checks show that Scotland and Northern Ireland are
- still free of the disease.
-
- Tim Boswell, horticulture minister, said yesterday: "We
- have consulted the national beekeeping organisations and taken their views
- into consideration. The whole of England and Wales is now an infected
- area."
-
- The disease cannot be eliminated from hives without
- destroying the bees but it can be controlled with pesticide strips which
- attack the
- mites entering hives.
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 03:05:49 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Rabbits catch Railtrack on the hop
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970306030611.0b0fefb2@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Thursday, March 6th, 1997
-
- Rabbits catch Railtrack on the hop
- By Robert Uhlig, Technology Correspondent
-
-
- RAILTRACK now has a new excuse for delayed trains -
- burrowing rabbits.
-
- Embankments, cuttings and sidings across the country are
- riddled with rabbit warrens and at risk of collapse, according to a report
- published today. "We've got a problem with rabbits and have to keep an eye
- on their burrowing," a Railtrack spokesman said. "On the West
- Coast line near Rugby, rabbit warrens have already added to the instability
- of cuttings and caused a landslide after a flash flood."
-
- Fencing to keep railside rabbits from farmers' crops also
- protects them from predators, and as the breeding season begins, the
- problem could get out of control. Rabbits have been on the increase since
- the 1950s, when an epidemic of the viral disease myxomatosis devastated the
- population.
-
- However, according to a report in today's New Scientist,
- researchers from the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food have found
- that rabbits have gained resistance to the weakening virus. "Colonies spring
- up, grow and can cause a problem. We keep an eye on it and do cull them,"
- the spokesman said. "But it's a difficult balance
- between keeping the rabbits under control and being called a rabbit
- murderer."
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 97 08:08:27 UTC
- >From: SDURBIN@VM.TULSA.CC.OK.US
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Easter Bunnies and Chicks
- Message-ID: <199703061407.JAA09212@envirolink.org>
-
- I've just discovered an ad for baby Easter Bunnies $4.00 and Easter
- Chicks $1.00 each. I was hoping this wasn't going on around here anymore,
- but, evidently it is. Please write or fax telling them these fragile little
- creatures are not toys and should not be sold as novelties for Easter.
- Thanks so much!!
-
- Write to: Farmer's Feed Store, 121 North Main, Sapulpa, OK 74066
- Fax #: 918-224-7697 Phone#: 918-224-4460
-
- --Sherrill
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 08:08:27 -0800 (PST)
- >From: Friends of Animals <foa@igc.apc.org>
- To: chrisw@fund.org, ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Scorecard Request
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970306115709.62c703ce@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Chris-
- Please send me a scorecard. Nice letter on Campfire in
- the Post, btw.
-
- thanks,
- Bill
-
- Bill Dollinger
- Friends of Animals
- 2000 P. Street, NW #415
- Washington, DC 20036
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 11:24:38 -0500 (EST)
- >From: PAWS <paws@CapAccess.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Kim Basinger and PAWS on March 7 Leeza
- Message-ID: <Pine.SUN.3.91-FP.970306112214.14271A-100000@cap1.capaccess.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- Kim Basinger (spokesperson for PAWS' Free the Elephants Campaign) will
- appear on the Leeza Show tomorrow, Friday, March 7th along with PAWS'
- founders Pat Derby and Ed Stewart. The whole hour will be devoted to the
- issue of captive elephants. The show is syndicated so check your local
- listings for network and time of broadcast!
- Date: Thu, 06 Mar 1997 09:20:47 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Prince pardoned
- Message-ID: <331EFCEF.DD4@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- The following is from a Wall Street Journal article (Mar. 6, 1997)
- regarding Jeanne Shaheen, New Hampshire's Governor. The article was
- written by James M. Perry, staff reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.
-
- ==================================================================
-
- CONCORD, N.H. -- Jeanne Shaheen had barely
- settled into her new job as New Hampshire's first
- woman governor when she was hit by a crisis last month
- -- life or death for Prince the dog.
-
- Prince is a rambunctious 3 1/2 -year-old Labrador from
- Portsmouth, down on the state's seacoast. Last year,
- Prince escaped home confinement and pretty much
- gobbled up a neighbor's rooster. Though he had never
- threatened any human beings, Prince was sentenced to
- death as a "vicious" animal by a special police panel.
-
- Animal lovers rallied "round Prince, and in her first major
- decision Gov. Shaheen, a Democrat, said she was
- prepared to pardon the dog. In no time at all, Prince
- was bustled out of Portsmouth to a new home in the
- country, where he (with help from a human friend) wrote
- the governor a nice note. "I have been a lifelong
- Republican [which often left me a little grumpy and may
- account for my snapping at that rooster]," Prince
- declared. "But you have captured my heart forever."
-
- ----- snip ---------
- Date: Thu, 06 Mar 1997 09:47:32 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Human clones could follow soon
- Message-ID: <331F0334.265F@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Human clones could follow soon, pioneering scientists warn
-
- Reuter Information Service
-
- LONDON (Mar 6, 1997 10:37 a.m. EST) - The scientists who created Dolly
- the sheep, the world's first adult clone, said Thursday the developments
- could be applied to human cloning soon, and there should be
- international laws preventing such work.
-
- "If you really wanted to do it it could be done," said Ian Wilmut, the
- chief scientist at Scotland's Roslin Institute where the sheep
- experiment was carried out.
-
- News that a sheep had been cloned using a cell from an adult sheep
- shocked the world and prompted a flurry of soul-searching about whether
- the technology was morally acceptable.
-
- This week U.S. President Bill Clinton banned federal funding of cloning
- and German Research Minister Juergen Ruettgers called for a worldwide
- ban on cloning human beings.
-
- Danish scientists trying to produce cloned cattle said on Wednesday they
- were halting experiments pending a full debate.
-
- The scientists behind the technique, developed at the Roslin Institute
- and PPL Therapeutics Plc, told British parliamentarians on Thursday work
- with human eggs would be "distressing" and "offensive."
-
- Wilmut said that if scientists were prepared to take the "distressing"
- step of working with 1,000 human eggs, the size of the experiment that
- produced the sheep breakthrough, "you might expect to make significant
- progress in one or two years."
-
- But he added: "It is the unanimous view of the group within the
- institute and within the company that we would find this sort of work
- with human embryos offensive.
-
- "We could see no clinical reason why you would wish to make a copy of a
- person and we are pleased that it is already illegal in this country so
- we would support wholeheartedly the idea of (international) prohibition
- in as effective a way as possible."
-
- Wilmut's testimony went directly against Ruth Deech of the Human
- Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, which regulates fertility
- research, who said on Wednesday she could see circumstances under which
- cloning people would be desirable.
-
- She told the same committee that, for example, people at risk of having
- a baby with certain rare genetic disorders could instead be cloned,
- leaving the baby free of the defect.
-
- Deech said there was no need for a blanket prohibition on human cloning
- but perhaps the law needed "tweaking" to make sure experiments were
- properly controlled.
-
- But the scientists from PPL and the Roslin Institute defended their work
- with animals, saying it held out the prospect of cheaper food and new
- remedies for genetic diseases.
-
- The Roslin and PPL researchers say cloning is a natural outgrowth of
- their research into animal breeding and the production of medicines from
- animal blood and milk.
- Date: Thu, 06 Mar 1997 09:59:32 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Catching Emus
- Message-ID: <331F0604.5B69@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Officer perfects art of lassoing emus in Texas
-
- The Christian Science Monitor
-
- (Mar 6, 1997 09:55 a.m. EST) -- As the livestock officer in Liberty
- County, Texas, John "Bubba" Abshier has been called to round up
- thousands of stray critters. He's roped cattle on the railroad
- tracks, horses on the freeway, and even a pair of wild hogs meddling in
- a chicken coop.
-
- But last summer, Abshier got a call he'll never forget.
-
- "Bubba, you better come on down here," Deputy Sheriff John Haines told
- him. "There's a lady with a giant bird in her yard, and it just stomped
- her dachshund."
-
- That bird, it turned out, was a full-grown emu, and it took Abshier and
- Deputy Haines several hours to rope the six-foot, 120-pound fowl, tie it
- down, and load it onto a trailer. In the process, Abshier recalls, the
- bird managed to punt him about 15 feet.
-
- "I didn't know the first thing about catching an emu," he says, "but I
- learned right quick."
-
- Indeed, Abshier's had plenty of practice lately. Ever since the breeder
- market for emus collapsedlast year in the middle of a severe drought,
- some ranchers here and across Texas have apparently decided to set their
- birds loose rather than continue to feed them.
-
- Emus are known to wander the range in their native Australia, but
- Abshier says the farm-raised variety have little chance of surviving
- wild in Liberty County, northeast of Houston. Food is scarce,
- he says, and the birds are easy prey for bobcats, coyotes, and
- motorists. Most of the emus Abshierhas caught don't have much meat left
- on their breastbones.
-
- "They're domesticated animals," he says. "They're kept in close quarters
- and they get hand-fed. It's irresponsible to dump them. It makes me
- mad."
-
- According to Pierce Allman, director of the American Emu Association in
- Dallas, there are about 1 million emus in the United States, mostly in
- the South and West. Although he insists the number of abandoned birds is
- small, he acknowledges that the problem is most serious in Texas.
-
- Back in the mid-1980s, when Americans first started avoiding beef for
- health reasons, Allman explains, many ranchers here began buying emus,
- along with their distant cousins - ostriches and rheas - in hopes that
- their lean red meat would win back some of the consumers who'd switched
- to poultry. In addition, some people who didn't know anything about
- livestock started scooping up birds in hopes of making a fast buck. At
- the peak, he says, breeding pairs of these spindly legged birds,
- classified as ratites, fetched as much as $45,000.
-
- But the buying and breeding spree soon backfired. Slaughter facilities
- failed to keep pace, and supermarkets were slow to make room for the
- expensive meat. Today, breeding pairs won't fetch more than $3,500 - and
- one bird can be bought for as little as $75.
-
- Emu and rhea breeders fared the worst. Unlike ostriches, which are
- popular entrees in Europe and enjoy a ready market for their leather,
- emus and rheas produce far less meat and don't offer much else to
- consumers. Although Allman says byproducts like emu jerky and emu oil
- show great promise, their introduction into mainstream markets is still
- years away.
-
- Harold Dudley, an emu rancher in Kaufman, Texas, bought several birds
- three years ago to keep busy when he retired. After three years of
- building pens and fences, incubating the avocado-sized eggs, and
- struggling to administer shots, he's looking for a buyer. "It wore me
- out," he says. "If there had been a ready market, it might have been
- different."
-
- Although the vast majority of the nation's 6,000 emu ranchers are either
- sticking with it, turning their birds out to pasture until the market
- rebounds, or selling them, the number of emus left to lope across the
- Texas countryside seems to be increasing.
-
- Charles Sexton, a biologist at the Valconies Canyonlands National
- Wildlife Refuge near Austin, says he's been spotting emus strutting
- through the hills with greater frequency.
-
- Abshier, at least, is ready for them. A stocky man with bright blue eyes
- and an iron grip, he has been riding and roping as long as he can
- remember. Whenever Abshier gets a call, day or night, he loads his
- horse, Sally, into his trailer, orders his two best yellow cur dogs into
- his pickup truck, and rolls out.
-
- Roping an emu, he says, is a little different from catching a bull. "You
- gotta rope 'em fast," he says. "Emus have real good peripheral vision,
- and they can hear that rope swinging, so you gotta come around quick. If
- they get going, they'll outrun a horse."
-
- Once he's roped the bird, he says, he lets the loop slip down until it
- covers the bird's stubby wings, at which point they usually stop running
- and squat down.
-
- Loading the bird into a trailer is another matter. To keep the birds
- from pecking and kicking, Abshier says, he plops a cotton glove over
- their heads. Since emus are too heavy to carry, he'll straddle the birds
- from behind, grab their wings and walk them to the trailer. "It's kind
- of like pushin' a wheelbarrow," he says. Since last summer, Abshier has
- caught and penned 16 of the birds.
-
- It wasn't always so easy, though. On one occasion, Abshier roped a rhea
- around the neck, which only made the bird fight harder, nearly
- strangling itself. After trying to subdue it for an hour, he says,
- Deputy Sheriff David King took a desperate approach he won't soon
- repeat.
-
- "He Tarzaned it," Abshier says, describing Deputy King's wild, but
- ultimately successful, flying tackle. "He spent the rest of the day
- pulling dewberry stickers out of his pants."
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 18:11:15 +0000
- >From: jonathanowen@wspa.org.uk (Jonathan Owen)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Controversial dog fur 'factory' closed down
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970306180739.41df78ac@mailhost.wspa.org.uk>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >Date: Thu, 06 Mar 1997 17:56:16
- >To: AR-NEWS@ENVIROLINK.ORG,environews,Intl.Herald Tribune,Overseas Media
- >From: Jonathan Owen <JonathanOwen@wspa.org.uk>
- >Subject: Controversial dog fur 'factory' closed down
- >
- >>
- >>World Society for the Protection of Animals
- >>2, Langley Lane, London SW8 1TJ
- >>Tel: 0171 793 0540 Fax: 0171 793 0208
- >>PRESS RELEASE7th March 1997
- >>
- >>MAYOR CLOSES CONTROVERSIAL DOG FUR FACTORY
- >>
- >>A recent decision by the Mayor of Kiev, Aleksandr Omelchenko, to close the
- cityÆs controversial dog ærecycling plantÆ (known as æbudkaÆ) has been
- welcomed by animal welfarists, including the World Society for the
- Protection of Animals (WSPA). The government-run dog pound had been used as
- a fur factory, with thousands of dogs being cruelly killed and then skinned
- for their fur each year. However, the complex is to be transformed into an
- animal shelter which will be managed by WSPAÆs member society, the Kiev
- Animal Protection Society-SOS.
- >>
- >>The closure of this facility follows a long running campaign by WSPA to
- stop local government officials from carrying out an inhumane ækill and
- recycleÆ policy on unwanted dogs. The Mayor of Kiev has ordered an
- investigation into those responsible for the skinning and selling of dog fur.
- >>
- >>Dragan Nastic, WSPA Regional Manager for Europe, said " We are working
- with the authorities to introduce modern humane stray control methods which
- will bring Kiev into line with other European cities and serve as an example
- to towns throughout the Ukraine. ô
- >>
- >>WSPA is also helping to fund the building of a new shelter for unwanted
- dogs on the outskirts of Kiev and WSPA Advisory Directors John Gripper and
- Sheelagh Graham are currently meeting with government authorities to discuss
- how they can introduce humane ways of dealing with stray dogs.
- >>
- >>-ends-
- >>.....cont/
- >>
- >>-2-
- >>
- >>╖ Broadcast quality beta footage and photographs are available.
- >>╖ For further information, please contact:
- >>
- >>Jonathan Owen, WSPA Press Officer: T.0171 793 0540 F.0171 793 0208
- >>
- >>WSPA Advisory Directors John Gripper and Sheelagh Graham may be contacted
- c/o Zoe Stamper on T/F.00 380 4426 44608
- >>
- >>Kiev Animal Protection Society-SOS T/F. 00 33 450 40 1603
- >>
- >>
- >>EDITORSÆ NOTES
- >>
- >>1. Uncontrolled breeding and human neglect has resulted in a stray dog
- population explosion in Central and Eastern Europe. WSPA's 'Pet Respect'
- campaign encourages responsible pet ownership and promotes the neutering and
- registration of all companion animals.
- >>
- >>2. In Ukraine, as throughout the former Soviet Union, stray animals are
- dealt with at recycling workshops known as 'budkas', run by the local
- government.
- >>
- >>3. It is estimated that there are at least 1/2 billion dogs in the world.
- (Based upon WHO/WSPA estimates.)
- >>
- >>4. There are approximately 28 million dogs and 25 million cats in western
- Europe. (PFMA 1993)
- >>
- >>5. A female dog and its offspring can produce 67,000 puppies in six years;
- a female cat and its offspring can produce 420,000 kittens in seven years.
- >>
- >>6. WSPA, working with the WHO, has produced a stray dog programme which is
- being considered as a blueprint for all member countries of the Council of
- Europe.
- >>
- >>
- >
-
- Date: Thu, 06 Mar 1997 10:07:31 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Bill would ban human cloning
- Message-ID: <331F07E3.1393@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- Congressman introduces bill that would ban human cloning
-
- Copyright ⌐ 1997 N.Y. Times News Service
-
- WASHINGTON (Mar 6, 1997 00:13 a.m. EST) -- A House Republican on
- Wednesday introduced legislation to ban the cloning of humans and to ban
- federal funding for such experiments, proposals generally discouraged by
- several scientists who heard about them at a congressional hearing on
- cloning.
-
- At that hearing, the director of the National Institutes of Health, Dr.
- Harold Varmus, said that although he found human cloning offensive, he
- could see rare cases in which it might be acceptable, like those
- involving infertile couples.
-
- But Varmus predicted that human cloning would probably never occur on a
- large scale, essentially because sex and diversity are "the staples of
- life" for humans.
-
- The proposed bans were introduced by Rep. Vernon Ehlers of Michigan, a
- research physicist, who said that if Congress did not ban human cloning
- immediately, it might later take the undesirable step of banning all
- cloning. As a scientist, he said, he wanted to make sure that research
- on animal cloning could proceed as unrestricted as possible.
-
- At the hearing, Ehlers said he opposed human cloning on moral, ethical
- and religious grounds, adding later in an interview: "What if in the
- cloning process you produce someone with two heads and three arms?" he
- said. "Are you simply going to euthanize and dispose of that person? The
- answer is no. We're talking about human life."
-
- On Tuesday, President Clinton temporarily banned the use of federal
- money for research on cloning people and asked for a voluntary
- moratorium on the part of researchers supported by private money.
-
- There is no evidence now that anyone in the United States is doing such
- work.
-
- Ehlers described his legislation at the first congressional hearing on
- cloning since Scottish scientists announced late last month that they
- had cloned a sheep, and Oregon scientists subsequently revealed that
- they had cloned two rhesus monkeys. Sen.r Bill Frist, R-Tenn., and a
- medical doctor, plans hearings next week that are to include testimony
- from Ian Wilmut, the researcher who cloned the sheep.
-
- Though much of Wednesday's hearing was devoted to the general topic of
- cloning and the medical advances that animal cloning could produce, the
- notion of human cloning seemed to capture more imaginations.
-
- Varmus said that although he generally found human cloning "offensive
- and not scientifically necessary," it might be acceptable in some cases.
-
- "Maybe there are some situations in which we would find it ethical," he
- said in an interview after the hearing, suggesting that an infant could
- be cloned from the bone marrow of an infertile man while the woman
- provided the egg.
-
- But he said that he found people's preoccupation with reproducing their
- own genes a little puzzling and that he would prefer to deal with
- infertility "the old-fashioned way" -- by adoption. "I'm not a genetic
- determinist," he said.
-
- He added: "How do we define reproductive rights? What is government's
- role? Where does privacy begin and end? These are issues that are
- extremely complex. And there will never be human cloning on a large
- scale. Sex and diversity are good. The staples of life."
-
- Still, he and others gave a thumbs down to Ehlers' proposed bans.
-
- Varmus worried that Ehlers' ban on human cloning would be too
- restrictive and unnecessary; anyone who wanted to do such research, he
- said, could simply move offshore.
-
- >From beyond the hearing, held by Rep. Constance Morella, the Maryland
- Republican whose district includes the National Institutes of Health,
- came more pronounced opposition to any bans.
-
- Dr. Ward Cassells, chief of cardiology at the University of Texas
- Medical School and director of basic research at the Texas Heart
- Institute, said in a telephone interview that the proposed bans
- were based on emotional reactions that have been "inappropriately
- clothed in religious language."
-
- He also predicted that the current condemnation of human cloning would
- turn into approval once infertile couples started seeking it. Human
- cloning might be possible in the not too distant future, he said. "A
- couple or a single woman will step up to the plate and volunteer," he
- said. "That's all it will take."
- Date: Thu, 06 Mar 1997 10:29:47 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Vivisectors worried about funding
- Message-ID: <331F0D1B.4205@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Experts say fear of human cloning could hamper other research
-
- The Associated Press
-
- WASHINGTON (Mar 6, 1997 09:25 a.m. EST) -- The director of the National
- Institutes of Health and other experts say a "rush to legislate" against
- human cloning research may shackle other biological and genetic studies
- that could save lives in medicine and produce more food on the farm.
-
- The statement at a House committee hearing came after Rep. Vernon J.
- Ehlers, R-Mich., announced he was introducing two bills on cloning --
- one to ban federal funding of human cloning research and another that
- would make it unlawful for anyone in the United States to engage in such
- research.
-
- Ehlers, a physicist, said the action would put legislative teeth into an
- executive ban on federal funding of human embryo research that was
- announced Tuesday by President Clinton. The president urged
- privately funded labs to also refrain from human cloning experiments.
-
- New laws are needed, Ehlers said, because "it is important for us to
- draw the boundary."
-
- Witnesses before the House Science technology subcommittee, led by Dr.
- Harold Varmus, director of the National Institutes of Health, warned
- that unless laws are drawn carefully, they could cripple research that
- could be of great value to medicine and to agriculture.
-
- Concern over human cloning was prompted by the recent announcement that
- a Scottish researcher had cloned a sheep, named Dolly, from udder cells
- removed from an adult ewe. Shortly afterward, scientists at the Oregon
- Primate Research Center announced that two rhesus monkeys had been
- cloned from embryo cells.
-
- Ehlers said these developments have captured the interest of the
- American public and there is worry that cloning could be misused.
- Introducing legislation now, he said, could head off a groundswell of
- public distaste that could lead to a ban of all genetic research.
-
- Varmus said he also was opposed to human cloning research, but he urged
- Ehlers and Congress to pause before passing a law. "Maybe there are some
- situations in which we would find it ethical," he said.
-
- "Unless a bill puts a very tight fence around that which Congress wants
- to forbid, it could cut off research toward a wanted goal," Varmus said.
-
- He said he believes Clinton's action on cloning "was intended to give us
- a period of deliberation," and he urged Congress to wait until a
- presidential group, the National Bioethics Advisory Commission, makes
- its report in 90 days.
-
- Dr. Caird E. Rexroad Jr. of the Agriculture Department said his agency's
- scientists have been cloning farm animals using genes from embryos since
- 1986. The USDA is developing gene transfer techniques that will produce
- animals that are low in fat and resistant to disease.
-
- James A. Geraghty, president of Genzyme Transgenics Corp., said his
- company was using cloning techniques to make animals whose organs could
- be used for human transplantation. Genetically altered cows or goats, he
- said, could produce milk that contains drugs for the treatment of human
- disease.
-
- Dr. M. Susan Smith, director of the Oregon Primate Research Center, said
- her researchers hope to use cloning techniques to produce a group of
- identical monkeys that could be used to test drugs.
-
- "Genetically identical monkeys would revolutionize the use of nonhuman
- primates in biomedical research," Smith said.
-
- ===================================================================
-
- If you want to E-mail your senators and representative to express your
- feelings about cloning, you'll find their E-mail addresses at web site
- http://www.viet.net/Community/congress.html
-
- Andy
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 14:54:00 -0500 (EST)
- >From: AAVSONLINE@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: RFI-Iditarod/PHC
- Message-ID: <970306145359_1948036871@emout10.mail.aol.com>
-
- Someone recently posted information on Prarie Home Companion's promotion of
- Iditarod. If I am not mistaken, it was a rebroadcast from last year. Can
- someone please send me the information, including contact information for
- Garrison Keilor and PHC.
-
- thanks
-
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 15:03:58 -0500 (EST)
- >From: Franklin Wade <franklin@smart.net>
- To: Ar-News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: ALF strikes DC Miller's Furs - twice!
- Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.3.95.970306150032.5173B-100000@smarty.smart.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- Once is never enough....
- ALF strikes DC Miller's Furs twice in one week.
-
- Manny Miller, owner of Miller's Furs in Washington DC, knows what it
- is like to be visited by the ALF, but this is the first time he got
- hit twice in one week.
-
- March 1 - Early morning - DC Miller's Furs
- * The store was paint bombed.
-
- March 5 - Late Evening - DC Miller's Furs
- * Etching cream was used to decorate "FUR HURTS" on one of the windows.
- * A road-kill deer that was "extremely" bloody was placed in front of
- the doors.
-
- Compassion Over Killing activists frequently hold protests at Miller's
- Furs. We certainly appreciate any help we can get to stop Manny-boy.
-
- Someone has to stop the killers, ALF is trashing Miller's.
- _____________________________________________________________________
- franklin@smart.net Franklin D. Wade
- United Poultry Concerns - www.envirolink.org/arrs/upc
- Compassion Over Killing - www.envirolink.org/arrs/cok
-
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 97 14:19:56 -0500
- >From: Karin Zupko <ma.neavs.com!karin@ma.neavs.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (RFI )-Biotech products
- Message-ID: <9703061919.AA23606@titan.ma.neavs.com>
-
- For obvious reasons, I am trying to update our library on issues
- surrounding genetic engineering. I am looking for some good articles
- on the health risks associated with biotechnology products (like
- pharmaceutical products from transgenic articles). I have lots of
- material on xenotransplants, including the excellent critique of
- xenotransplantation by the Medical Research Modernization Committee.
-
- If anyone has suggestions for articles, please e-mail me. If you
- can send anything, the address is:
-
- Karin Zupko
- NEAVS
- 333 Washington St., Suite 850
- Boston, MA 02108-5100
-
- Thank you very much.
- Date: Thu, 06 Mar 1997 14:20:20 -0500
- >From: David Rolsky <David.J.Rolsky-2@tc.umn.edu>
- To: soar@waste.org, ar-news@envirolink.org, ar-views@envirolink.org,
- veg-mn@waste.org, Joolie M Geldner <Julie.M.Geldner-1@tc.umn.edu>
- Subject: [US] Update on Freeman Wicklind. Jailed Activist in Mpls, MN
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.32.19970306192020.00677eb0@gold.tc.umn.edu>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- March 6, 1996
-
- MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota
-
- Freeman Wicklund, who sentenced to 90 days in jail yesterday for
- disorderly conduct and trespassing, is currently being held at the Hennepin
- County Detention Center.
-
- He is refusing to cooperate with the authorities beyond giving his
- name and address. The authorities have responded by threatening additional
- charges should he continue with his non-cooperation.
-
- In addition, this is delaying his transport to the Plymouth Adult
- Corrections Facility.
-
-
- People interested in supporting Freeman are encouraged to call or write the
- following people.
-
- Freeman Wicklund c/o
- Plymouth Adult Corrections Facility
- 1145 Shenandoah Lane
- Plymouth, MN 55447
- Phone #: 612-475-4246
- Fax #: 612-475-4266
-
- Please note that Freeman is currently at the Hennepin Detention Center. The
- status of his transportation to the Plymouth facility is currently unknown.
-
- The sentencing judge:
-
- Judge Joan Lancaster
- c/o Juvenile Court
- Juvenile Justice Center
- 626 South 6th Street
- Minneapolis, MN 55415-1573
- Phone #: 612-348-5660
- Fax #: 612-348-8340
-
-
- The prosecuting attorney:
-
- ATTN: Sandra Anderson
- City Attorney's Office
- 300 Metropolitan Center
- 333 South 7th St.
- Minneapolis, MN 55402-2453
- Phone #: 612-673-2968
- Fax #: 612-673-2189
-
- Freeman's current location as of 1:00 PM, March 6.
-
- Hennepin County Detention Center
- 350 South 5th Street
- Room 36
- Minneapolis, MN 55415
- Phone #: 348-5112
- (no fax #)
-
-
- If you'd like more information please feel free to email me.
- David Rolsky, Composer at large
- http://www.tc.umn.edu/nlhome/g037/rolsk001/
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 13:54:24 -0800 (PST)
- >From: Mike Markarian <MikeM@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, seac+announce@ecosys.drdr.virginia.edu,
- en.alerts@conf.igc.apc.org
- Subject: Montana Continues Killing Yellowstone Bison
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970306214211.5e872746@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- IMMEDIATE ACTION NEEDED!!!
-
- MONTANA CONTINUES KILLING YELLOWSTONE BISON
-
- The state of Montana has already killed more than 1,000 Yellowstone bison
- this winter and the slaughter continues. Attempting to shift blame to
- certain federal agencies, Montana officials have argued that they are simply
- protecting the state's "brucellosis-free" status which the USDA has
- threatened to revoke. The Governor of Montana also criticized the National
- Park Service for its management of bison, insisting erroneously that its
- policy of natural regulation is responsible for the crisis which currently
- exists.
-
- Montana must take responsibility for the continued slaughter of bison for
- numerous reasons. First, Montana has refused to adopt emergency contingency
- measures proposed by USDA and the Park Service which would allow for more
- tolerance of bison on public and private lands during the remainder of this
- season. Despite these proposals from federal agencies, the Montana
- Department of Livestock is charging full steam ahead with its killing
- operation. Second, Montana has never challenged the authority of USDA to
- revoke its brucellosis-free status merely on the presence of potentially
- exposed or infected bison in its state. USDA has no legal jurisdiction over
- wildlife. And third, Montana benefits from the revenue generated by winter
- visitors to Yellowstone, many of whom choose to take snowmobile tours
- through the Park to observe bison. Unfortunately, the grooming of snowmobile
- trails in the Park to accommodate these users also facilitates bison
- emigration from the Park. When the bison exit the Park using these
- energy-efficient travel routes, most are met either with a bullet or a trap.
- This senseless killing must stop immediately.
-
- PLEASE CONTACT THE FOLLOWING INDIVIDUALS:
-
- The Honorable Marc Racicot
- Governor of Montana
- State Capitol
- Helena, MT 59620
- Phone: (406) 444-3111
- Fax: (406) 444-5529
-
- Mr. Laurence Petersen, Executive Officer and
- Dr. Clarence Siroky, State Veterinarian
- Montana Department of Livestock
- P.O. Box 202001
- Helena, MT 59620
- Phone: (406) 444-2023
- Fax: (406) 444-1929
-
- Tell them:
-
- 1. The killing of bison must stop immediately. It is hypocritical to claim
- that Montana wants to ensure the integrity of Yellowstone bison when their
- actions have already jeopardized the same.
-
- 2. The time has come to stand up to the baseless threats of USDA and to
- adopt sensible risk management strategies for dealing with bison migrating
- in Montana rather than calling out the killing squad whenever a bison steps
- hoof over the Park boundary.
-
- 3. You're not going to visit Montana until the state has called off its
- bison hit squad.
-
- Thank you for your help! For more information please contact The Fund for
- Animals at <fund4animals@fund.org> or our Rocky Mountain office at (307)
- 859-8840.
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 17:30:29 -0500 (EST)
- >From: Nichen@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Murat Tiger Trainer & Old Indiana Park Deaths
- Message-ID: <970306172831_543593278@emout09.mail.aol.com>
-
- Wed night I posted two different articles from the Indianapolis STAR. One
- was an interview with a big cat trainer for the Murat Shrine Circus, and the
- other was a story about fourteen animals dying at a defunct amusement park.
-
- This afternoon the reporter who did the interview with the big cat trainer
- contacted me. She said that the trainer was taking two of the tigers from
- the amusement park back to Fla for "rehabilitation".
-
- Whatever that may mean.
-
- Nix
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 17:57:42 -0500
- >From: jun1022@gate.cybernex.net
- To: veg-nyc@waste.org, ar-news@envirolink.org, ar-views@envirolink.org,
- veg-teen@envirolink.org, seac+animalrights@ecosys.drdr.virginia.edu
- Subject: HungerStrike Support/Anti Fur Mobilization in NY State-Full Text
- Message-ID: <v01540b00af429dc1a3e3@[204.141.117.145]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- When last sent, the second half of this message was cut off. Below is the
- full text
- >I am writing to inform you of a grave situation. Four young animal rights
- >activists are currently participating in a desperate and heroic campaign
- >on behalf of fur-bearing animals. Jeff Watkins, a leading activist with
- >Animal Defense League -Syracuse, considered by many to be one of the
- >strongest grassroots groups in the country, is currently serving a seven
- >month jail term for nonviolent actions in defense of animals in a city
- >notorious for human and civil rights abuses, particulalrly of animal
- >rights activists. He is joined by Nicole Rogers (serving a 38 day
- >sentence) and Chris Tarbell (serving a 12 day sentence) of Syracuse and
- >Tony Wong, a juvenile serving a sentence of indefinite length in Indiana,
- >all imprisoner for nonviolent animal rights actions. Tony is on a 24 hour
- >suicide watch as a result of his strike and has been stripped to his
- >underwear. Following the lead of British animal rights activist Barry
- >Horne, who engaged in a hunger strike to stop his nation's moral and
- >financial support of animal research, the four are engaging in a fast unto
- >death until three demands are met concerning concerning fur-bearing
- >animals.
- >
- >
- >Their Demands:
- >
- >1. A federal ban on the leghold trap. Two members of the House are going
- >to be introducing a bill to ban the leghold trap, Representatives Nita
- >Lowrey from NY, and Chris Shays from CT, but the hunting/trapping lobby
- >is providing fierce opposition.
- >2. The US Trade Office must stop challenging the EU Wild Fur Ban. The
- >European Union (England, France, Finland, and like 11 other countries)
- >passed a law years ago that said no wild caught fur could be imported in
- >to the EU from nations that hadn't banned the leghold trap. With the
- >exception of Holland, the EU hasn't put the law into effect yet because
- >the 3 dominant trapping nations, the US, Canada, and Russia kept
- >threatening to file a GATT challenge in front of the World Trade
- >Organization.
- >
- >GATT is the General Agreement on Trade and Tariff. If the EU lost they
- >would have to pay a fine. Canada and Russia are now trying to work out a
- >compromise as implementation of the ban is now scheduled for the spring.
- >The US is taking a pro trap position, and the activists demand that the
- >USDdrop opposition to the ban, and agree to not file a GATT challenge.
- >
- >
- >3.The third demand is the the State of NY stop contemplating a beaver
- >butchery bill. Snare traps, metal nooses that choke animals to death, are
- >illegal approximately 13 states including NY. Assemblyman Michael Bragman
- >from Syracuse keeps introducing a bill to legalize underwater snares to
- >drown beaver with. He also wants to extend the trap check limit to 72
- >hours. Jeff and company are demanding that this bill be canned for good.
- >
- > All of these actvists are prepared to die rather than stop their
- >hungerstrikes.
- >
- >
- > It is vital that we mobilize around their heroic action and not let the
- >die . Not only would this be tragic in and of itself, but in addition,
- >the animals would lose three of their most powerful advocates.
- >
- >These brave, young, warriors have provided us the impetus to launch a
- >major national campaign. Historically, while the animal right movement
- >has been highly effective at getting media, we have been less adapt at
- >acheiving real political change. With this campaign that will change. It
- >is time for all animal advocates to unite, from the most moderate to the
- >most radical, large national groups and tiny grassroots groups. We've
- >all heard a thousand times that animal rights garners more letters to
- >Congresspeople than any other political issue. It is time to show that
- >there is strenth behind those sentiments, that we don't only wield pens,
- >but also a powerful punch. This is an issue where we can expect broad
- >public support, which we shoild utilize fully. With proper organizing and
- >outreach there is no reason we can't draw the sort of numbers that early
- >anti-vivisection rallies drew in the early '80s.
- >
- >
- >
- >Okay we'd better start planning for Jeff and company.
- >
- >In New York State, let's focus primarily on the beaver snare bill.
- >
- >JP Goodwin, executive director of the Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade,
- >has suggested a statewide mobilization to Syracuse for a rally this Sunday
- >at Michael Bragman's office. Can we do it on this short notice or should
- >we wait until the following weekend? Time is of the essence. Please
- >respond FAST so we can plan.
- >
- >Our targets are legislators and the DEC, who are basically, in conjuction
- >with "sportsmen's groups" behind initiatives like this. The most
- >important part of pro-wildlife work is discrediting the wildlife
- >management agencies. We have to realize that Bloody Michael Bragman
- >doesn't operate in a vacuum. I would suggest: disruptions of New York
- >State Conservation Council meetings, occupations of bill suporters
- >offices, lobbying meetings with legislators on the fence, particularly
- >downstate, where legislators are less influenced by hunters, press
- >conferences, candlelight vigils at all of the above places While it's not
- >required, we could do this all statewide asthe Coalition to Abolish the
- >Fur Trade (CAFT). CAFT is a network of grassroots groups similar to the
- >Coalition To Protect Canada Geese: autonomous, actively networking
- >grassroots groups working with the expert assistance and strategy of JP
- >Goodwin. A press release for indiviudal action we could put something
- >like "the protest, organized by Animal Defense League (or whoever), part
- >of the Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade..." The advantage to this is
- >that we take utilize CAFT's reputation as a heavy-hitter, increasing our
- >chance of national media coverage. CAFT has already prepared a flyer on
- >the Watkins hunger strike. I suggest we tryto unite militants and
- >traditionally tacticaly moderate groups on this issue, since there is a
- >role for everyone to play. It would be great if the Fund for Animals,
- >HSUS. the ASPCA, and Friends of Animals joined the campaign. Also the New
- >York State Coalition for Animals.would make a great addition to this
- >campaign
- >
- >
- >New York City is especially vital, because this is where we find the
- >greatest chance of finding allies in the legislative arena, and half of
- >the state's population is in NYC, giving the city major legislative power.
- >
- >
- >To discuss this issue further, please post to the list, email me at
- >Jun1022@cybernex.net or call me at (201) 930-9026.
- >
- >Adam Weissman
- >Student Abolitionist League/ Coalition to Abolish theFur Trade-NYC
- >
- >
- >PS I think we can use this fur hat think as a tip of the iceberg issue to
- >point out the game agencies' agenda, so let's tie it in. Details follow.
- >
- >
- >NEW MUSKRAT HATS RAISE FUROR
- >Albany (AP) 3/2/97
- >
- >The state's environmental conservation officers are getting new winter
- >hats, but
- >an animal-rights activist isn't wild about the material - muskrat fur. The
- >heads of the
- >275 fish-and-game officers were measured a few weeks ago for the hats, which
- >the state is buying at $34 apiece from a Canadian company. The hat is
- >actually cut from cloth with a brim of muskrat fur. Total cost: $9,350.
- >
- >"It's a practical thing - a winter hat. Stetson's just don't cut it in
- >wintertime in
- >New York state," he said. The DEC chose the muskrat hat over several other
- >types of fur hats. "We looked at the beaver because it's the state animal,
- >but muskrat was an affordable option,: Sheffer said.
- >
- >The new fashion statement by New York's men and women in green gets a
- >thumbs down from Marion Stark, a registered lobbyist in Albany for the
- >Fund for Animals. "The public feels the DEC's job is to protect animals, not
- >to kill them for their fur," Stark said. "The animials really suffer
- >terribly in the
- >traps. It's unnecessary and cruel." The Canadian company Crown Cap Ltd.
- >was chosen to make the hats after a competitive bidding process.
- >
- >END
- >
- >To contact Bloody Beaver Butcher Michael Bragman:
- >
- >
- >Michael Bragman
- >8285 Thompson Rd.
- >Clay, NY 13039
- >
- >home ph: 315/699-8388
- >work ph: 315/452-1044
- >work fax: 315/452-0872
- >
- >work address: 305 S. Main St., N. Syracuse, NY 13212
- >
- >
- >(Note: A national edition of this post will appear shortly, whith the same
- >beginning, but a very different ednding so please read the whole thing.)
- >
-
-
- Date: Thu, 06 Mar 1997 18:12:16 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Crossposting (Admin Note)
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970306181213.006da7a0@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- This has been happening quite a bit lately...just thought I'd post a
- reminder........
-
- Please do not "crosspost" when posting to AR-News!
-
- While crossposting is often frowned upon on many lists, on AR-News it can
- lead to a "degradation" of the "news" concept. Crossposting to other lists
- and/or individuals when posting to AR-News may be convenient for the
- poster, but may later cause problems for AR-News. Many people quickly go
- for the reply option and, depending on software, may "default" through
- options asking "reply to all?" or "reply to all recipients?"--this is one
- cause of comments/discussion/chat interfering with the "news" of AR-News.
- Not everyone has unlimited access or time to the internet, therefore many
- people subscribe to a "news" list for news, not discussion. Please
- remember this when posting to AR-News.
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 20:02:23 -0500 (EST)
- >From: ARAishere@aol.com
- To: David.J.Rolsky-2@tc.umn.edu, soar@waste.org, ar-news@envirolink.org,
- ar-views@envirolink.org, veg-mn@waste.org,
- Julie.M.Geldner-1@tc.umn.edu
- Subject: Re: [US] Update on Freeman Wicklind. Jailed Activist in Mpls, MN
- Message-ID: <970306200221_-1473293304@emout10.mail.aol.com>
-
- Freeman has now been transferred to the Plymouth Adult Correction Facility,
- but is to be held in lockdown for a week, presumably because he is
- hungerstriking. Please
- keep calling.
-
- Anne
- Animal Rights America
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 18:29:02 -0700
- >From: pmligotti@earthlink.net (Peter M. Ligotti)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Press Release -- Keeping Genetically Engineered Food Out of the Organic Market
- Message-ID: <v01540b0daf451c35008c@[206.250.112.214]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- The attached press release and press invitation has been sent
- to 200 press agencies.
-
- URGENT: please note that the time and place of the press
- conference have been changed to Friday, March 7, 11:00 am,
- Anaheim Marriott Hotel, Los Angeles Room (lower level)
- Los Angeles, U.S.A.
-
- This was changed due to feedback from the press
- requesting more notice.
-
- Please forward this press release and invitation
- to the your press contacts.
-
-
- NEWS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
-
- Organic Industry Leaders Warn Biotech Industry: KEEP OUT! --
- Newly-Formed National Coalition Cites Deep Concerns In Letter
- to U.S. Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman
-
- (MARCH 5) - A newly-formed national coalition of organic food
- industry producers, scientists, and consumer activist groups
- this week will send a strong message to U.S. Secretary of
- Agriculture Dan Glickman and the biotech industry:
- "Keep genetically engineered organisms (GEOs) out of the
- organic market."
-
- The coalition launches a high profile campaign to ban all
- GEOs from the organic market at a time when the biotech industry
- is splicing human genes into pigs, fish genes into tomatoes,
- and insect, viral, and bacterial DNA into foods on
- grocery stores shelves.
-
- The campaign will be launched simultaneously this week
- on both coasts in the U.S. and includes:
-
- 1. A letter signed by 28 top organizations within the
- organic foods industry to Secretary of Agriculture
- Dan Glickman, urging the Secretary to uphold the
- National Organic Standard Board's (NOSB)
- September 1996 resolution to categorically ban
- all genetically engineered organisms from the organic
- market.
-
- 2. A national news conference on Friday, March 7, 11:00 a.m.
- at the Anaheim Marriott, Los Angeles Room, during the
- Natural Foods Expo in Anaheim, California.
- (The Expo will be attended by an estimated 25,000
- manufacturers and retailers.)
-
- 3. A nationwide drive to collect one million
- signatures from consumers who are opposed to GEOs in
- the organic market, to be presented during the
- International Codex Committee on Food Labeling in
- Ottawa, Canada, April 14-18. (This Codex committee
- determines the status of international food
- labeling laws, including whether genetically
- engineered foods must be labeled.)
-
- "Contrary to biotech advertising and the official
- USDA position, genetic engineering is not harmless.
- It is a radical new technology that poses
- serious risks to our health and environment," said
- John Fagan, Ph.D., a Cornell-trained molecular biologist
- who gained international recognition when he returned $1.5
- million in NIH grants because his research could have been
- used for harmful genetic engineering applications.
- Dr. Fagan is a leader of the new coalition.
-
- "Many scientists believe that the genetic manipulation
- of the food supply could set off a chain reaction throughout
- the entire ecosystem, upsetting the delicate balance in nature
- for generations to come. Unlike chemical or nuclear
- contamination, genetic pollution cannot be cleaned up
- or contained. The effects of genetic mistakes are
- irretrievable and irreversible," Fagan said.
-
- Current FDA policy does not require any long-term
- safety testing on genetically engineered foods.
-
- "There have been no human feeding studies done on
- genetically engineered foods. And the FDA, by its own
- admission, doesn't have a complete record of
- information on these foods," said Laura Ticciati,
- executive director of the American Campaign to
- Ban Genetically Engineered Foods.
-
- "Despite incidents of illness, allergic reactions,
- and death, and increasing warnings from scientists and physicians,
- these foods are sitting on our grocery store shelves unlabeled.
- Right now the only non-genetically engineered food source
- available to the consumer is the organic market. But
- the integrity of the organic market is
- in jeopardy," Ticciati said.
-
- The following organic industry leaders signed the letter
- to U.S. Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman, calling for a
- ban on genetically engineered food in
- the organic market.
-
- John Hagelin, Director
- Institute of Science, Technology and
- Public Policy
-
- John Ardrey, Michael Potter
- Eden Foods Inc.
-
- James A. Riddle, Organic Inspector Independent
- Organic Inspectors Association
-
- Fred and Annie Kirschenmann
- Farm Verified Organic
-
- Professor Phil Bereano
- Washington State Biotechnology Action Council
-
- Doreen Stabinsky, Ph.D.
- Council for Responsible Genetics
-
- Richard W. Stewart
- Chief Executive Officer
- Frontier Cooperative Herbs
-
- Kingsley Brooks, Chairman
- Natural Law Party
-
- Theresa Carbrey, Education Director, New Pioneer Co-op
-
- Neil Carman, Ph.D.
- Clean Air Program Director
- Lone Star Chapter, Sierra Club
-
- Ronnie Cummins
- Pure Food Campaign
-
- Eileen Danneman
- National Coalition of Organized Women
-
- Thomas B. Harding, Jr. President
- Organic Crop Improvement Association International
-
- Joan Dye Gussow Emeritus Professor
- Teachers College, Columbia University
- Just Food, NYC
-
- Jeffrey Hollender
- Seventh Generation
-
- Judith Kew, Renu Namjoshi, Lynn Powell, Mary Pritchard
- Texas Consumers for Safe Food
-
- Jerry DeWitt, Coordinator
- State Sustainable Agriculture
- Iowa State University
-
- Steve Druker
- Alliance for Biotechnology
-
- John Kinsman, President
- Faily Farm Defenders
-
- Rodney Leonard
- Community Nutrition Institute
-
- Hildy Nelson
- Animal Alliance
-
- John Fagan, Ph.D.
- Professor of Molecular Biology,
- Maharishi University of Managment
-
- Laura Ticciati
- Executive Director Mothers for Natural Law
-
- David Vetter OCIA
- Grain Place Foods, Inc.
-
- Craig Winters Chairman of the Board
- Citizens for Health
-
- Charles Walters
- N.O.R.M.
-
- Margaret Wittenburg, Pamela Boyar
- Whole Foods Market
-
- Susan Futrell
- Director of Marketing and Sales Blooming Prairie Coop
-
- Judy DeRuvo
- Mintaka Mountain Farms, Austin, TX
-
-
- CONTACT: BOB ROTH, 515-472-2477, 515-469-9372
-
- Press Invitation
-
- Organic Industry Leaders Unite Against
- Genetically Engineered Foods during
- Natural Foods Expo
-
- - NEWS CONFERENCE in ANAHEIM -
- Friday, March 7 * 11:00 AM
- Anaheim Marriott Hotel, Los Angeles Room (Lower Level)
-
- The cloning of a sheep and a monkey has generated
- considerable debate in the press and public. However,
- a less graphic, but far more controversial and
- potentially dangerous development is taking place:
- the wholesale manipulation of the world's food supply
- by a handful of biotech industries. Only one
- market remains free of genetically engineered
- organisms-organic foods. But now that market is in
- jeopardy. For the first time, a national coalition of
- organic food industry leaders, scientists, and
- consumer groups have united together to preserve
- the safety and purity of the organic market.
- Representatives of the coalition are holding
- this news conference during the
- Natural Foods Expo to explain what
- they are doing and why.
-
- Panelists
-
- Michael Potter
- President and CEO, Eden Foods
- National organic foods manufacturer
-
- Jeffrey Hollender
- President and CEO, Seventh Generation
- Nation's leading manufacturer of green consumer products
-
- Annie Kirschemann Board of Directors, Farm Verified
- Organic Nationwide private organic certifiers
-
- Susan Haeger
- Executive Director, Citizens for Health
- National grassroots citizens health activist group
-
- Laura Ticciati
- Executive Director, American Campaign to Ban Genetically
- Engineered Foods Non-profit educational organization
- leading a public awareness campaign on
- dangers of genetically engineered foods
-
- John Fagan, Ph.D.
- Cornell-trained molecular biologist who gained
- international recognition when he returned $1.5 million
- in NIH grants because his research could have been
- used for harmful genetic engineering applications.
- Dr. Fagan is the chairman of the Department of
- Molecular Biology at Maharishi
- University of Management
-
- CONTACT: BOB ROTH, 515-472-2477, 515-469-9372
-
-
- >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
-
-
- Date: Thu, 06 Mar 1997 21:24:43 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Part of New York City quarantined for beetle
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970306212440.0068825c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Mercury Center web page:
- ----------------------------------------------
- Posted at 6:05 p.m. PST Thursday, March 6, 1997
-
- Part of New York City quarantined for beetle
-
- Reuters
-
- WASHINGTON -- A tree no longer grows in Brooklyn.
-
- The U.S. Agriculture Department said Thursday it
- was quarantining parts of the New York City
- boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens because of an
- infestation of the Asian longhorned beetle and
- would cut down trees invaded by the pest.
-
- The beetle, native to China, Japan and Korea, bores
- into healthy hardwood trees to feed on living tree
- tissue during the fall and winter and then emerges
- through a dime-sized hole in the spring. Department
- officials suspect it came to the United States by
- ship.
-
- ``This pest is highly destructive to trees,''
- Alfred Elder, a top official at the department's
- Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service said in
- a statement. ``If it moves into the hardwood
- forests of the northeastern United States or
- Canada, it could be a serious blow to nursery and
- forest products industries in those areas.''
-
- State officials working with the department will
- chop down the infested trees. The U.S. Forest
- Service has offered $500,000 to help replace them.
-
- The federal quarantine restricts the interstate
- movement of firewood, logs, green lumber, tree
- stumps, roots and branches and the debris of maple,
- horse chesnut, apple, chinaberry, mulberry, poplar
- and cherry trees, among others.
-
- New York has already set a state quarantine.
-
- Date: Thu, 06 Mar 1997 21:56:03 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Iditarod...another dog dies
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970306215601.006c1480@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Mercury Center web page:
- --------------------------------------------
- Posted at 6:38 p.m. PST Thursday, March 6, 1997
-
- Iditarod: Three ex-champs lead; another dog dies
-
- OPHIR, Alaska (AP) -- Three former champions held
- the top three spots and officials announced the
- death of a third dog Thursday as the Iditarod Trail
- sled dog race neared the halfway point.
-
- Jeff King of Denali Park, Doug Swingley of Lincoln,
- Mont., and Martin Buser of Big Lake were within an
- hour of one another and in that order approaching
- the town of Iditarod, halfway through the
- 1,100-mile race from Anchorage to Nome. All three
- had finished the mandatory 24-hour rest.
-
- Joe Redington of Knik, the 80-year-old described as
- ``the father of the Iditarod,'' pulled into McGrath
- Thursday morning with a dead dog in his sled.
-
- Race officials and the Iditarod's veterinary staff
- found no outward cause of death. Redington will
- remain in McGrath until a report on the dog is
- completed.
-
- News of the third animal death came a day after
- Iditarod veterinarians were trying to determine
- what killed a dog belonging to Wayne Curtis of
- Wasilla.
-
- Curtis was running 44th when he brought the animal
- to the Nikolai checkpoint early Wednesday.
-
- On Monday, a dog in the team of Anchorage musher
- Bill Bass died shortly after leaving the Skwentna
- checkpoint.
-
- Ten teams were reported running between Ophir and
- Iditarod by the middle of the morning. The leaders
- moved through an immense and virtually uninhabited
- stretch of Alaska, about the size of Indiana.
-
- During the early 1900's, the vast region of hills,
- swamps, lakes and mountains was swarming with tens
- of thousands of gold miners, but it's generally
- empty of people today.
-
- Race officials said that stretch of trail continues
- to be hard and fast under temperatures that dropped
- to around zero overnight.
-
- John Baker of Kotzebue was running fourth, about
- three hours behind the leaders. Fourth was Tim
- Osmar of Kasilof. Then came Dee Dee Jonrowe of
- Willow, Ramy Brooks of Fairbanks, Charlie Boulding
- of Nenana, Bill Cotter of Nenana and Vern Halter of
- Willow.
-
- The first musher into Iditarod will get $3,000 in
- gold and a trophy.
-
- The three former title-holders have been playing
- leader leapfrog through much of the race. But
- Buser, a two-time winner, said it was still too
- early to predict the outcome.
-
- ``Things will shake out by the Yukon,'' Buser said.
- ``If there's punchy trail, we'll wait a bit longer.
- The trail will dictate what we do in the way of
- strategy.''
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 20:07:56 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Meat report cover up - part 1
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970306200821.2a3751c4@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Friday, March 7th, 1997
-
- Ministers in clash over abattoir safety fiasco
- By George Jones, David Brown and Auslan Cramb
-
- GOVERNMENT denials of a cover-up over a damning report on
- hygiene standards in Britain's abattoirs were undermined last night when
- leading figures in the meat industry, health experts and the Scottish Office
- said they had not been alerted to its findings last year.
-
- Douglas Hogg, the Agriculture Minister, was increasingly
- isolated after the Government was accused of putting lives at risk by
- ordering the toning down of the report - which warned abattoirs were a
- breeding ground for E coli, salmonella and BSE - and then suppressing it.
- There was a further setback for Mr Hogg when he clashed with Michael
- Forsyth, the Scottish Secretary, who was "incandescent" over the handling of
- the report.
-
- A picture of confusion, buck-passing and incompetence
- emerged yesterday as the Government tried to extricate itself from the
- latest in a series of damaging scares about food safety. During angry
- exchanges in the Commons, John Major denied that the Government
- had suppressed the report drawn up by the Meat Hygiene Service more than a
- year ago.
-
- A leaked copy of the draft report warned that carcasses
- were being contaminated with faecal matter and urine from slaughtered
- animals which could allow meat to be contaminated from the E coli organism,
- which has killed at least 20 people through food poisoning.
-
- It also found that spinal cords were not always being
- removed from carcasses, which meant potentially BSE-infected matter could
- have been added to animal feed. It made 81 recommendations for better
- practice in abattoirs.
-
- Mr Hogg, on crutches after breaking his foot falling down
- stairs,
- attempted to defend his department's handling of the report. He said it was
- an an "internal working document to be used by the Meat Hygiene Service. So
- it was not formally published."
-
- But at Westminster, opposition MPs reacted with
- incredulity when Mr Major claimed it had not been given to ministers despite
- its highly
- critical assessment of hygiene standards in abattoirs. "There are huge
- numbers of working documents of this sort every year. If they all came to
- ministers for them to read, nothing else would be done at all," argued Mr Major.
-
- Mr Blair said that was an "extraordinary" explanation.
- "Whether a
- report is shown to ministers should depend on its seriousness," he
- said. "Just when will someone in this Government take responsibility for the
- proper, competent administration of our affairs?" asked Mr Blair.
-
- In a speech in Inverness today Mr Blair will announce that
- the setting up of an independent Food Standards Agency will be a Labour
- manifesto commitment. Mr Major accused the Labour leader of
- "raising scares" about the meat industry when the problems revealed by the
- report were being tackled. "There is no question of the report being
- suppressed," he said.
-
- But the Government assurances that there was no cover-up
- were challenged on several fronts last night. Prof Sir Hugh Pennington,
- chairman of the expert group looking into last year's Lanarkshire E coli
- outbreak in which 18 people died, said the failure to alert his group to its
- existence could delay the publication of its own report, due out this month.
-
- A Downing Street spokesman countered the professor's
- claims by saying that Ann Foster, one of Sir Hugh's team, was a member of the
- MHS ownership board and would have known about the report. She later denied
- any knowledge of the report, although she said she was aware that all
- slaughterhouses had been assessed.
-
- In the Commons Mr Hogg said the report had been "made
- available to all concerned" including the Scottish Office - which ordered an
- investigation into the Lanarkshire E coli outbreak. However, the Scottish
- Office said that that it was also unaware of the report and received a copy
- for the first time yesterday.
-
- Meanwhile, the Meat and Livestock Commission, the
- statutory agency that promotes British beef, lamb and pork, said last night
- that it had not seen the report on abattoirs until yesterday.
-
- Mr Hogg also dismissed MPs' protests that they had not
- been alerted to the report. He said the annual report of the Meat Hygiene
- Service
- placed in the Commons library shortly before the summer recess said
- there had been a "review" of abattoirs - and MPs should have realised from
- that there would be a report and phoned up and asked for it.
-
- Mr Hogg embarked on a determined attempt to undermine the
- credibility of Bill Swann, the author of the original 54-page report on the
- inspections of abattoirs across the country in 1995. Mr Swann, now
- assistant chief veterinary officer at the RSPCA, said his team had been
- told to tone down the paper, and that its publication had then been delayed
- and its circulation restricted to members of the MHS's industry forum.
-
- The report was originally due for publication last March -
- at the time when the Government announced it had received scientific evidence
- linking BSE in cattle with a new strain of CJD in humans. He said: "I was
- told that it was not a good thing to release this type of document, giving
- the industry a battering, with BSE around."
-
- But Mr Hogg told MPs that Mr Swann's professional
- colleagues found his draft report unsatisfactory. "They wanted him to change it
- because it did not reflect their views in carrying out the assessment. He
- decided not to do that. At that point they commissioned another expert to do
- the report on red meat. The report that emerged and was subsequently
- circulated to the industry represents the majority view of the veterinary
- experts," said Mr Hogg.
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 20:08:00 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Meat report cover up - part 2
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970306200824.2a37873e@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Friday, March 7th, 1997
-
- The watered-down report that no-one remembers seeing
- David Graves traces the origins of the elusive report and tensions behind
- its drafting
-
- BILL Swann first became aware of the Meat Hygiene Service's
- intended review of abattoir hygiene practice and animal welfare standards
- when he saw an advertisement for inspectors in the Veterinary Record in
- early 1995.
-
- The review was due to start in April of that year to
- coincide with the launch of the MHS as the new national meat hygiene standards
- agency and Mr Swann, an experienced veterinary surgeon, was appointed a
- regional inspector on a 12-month contract. He was told that the intention
- was to publish the results of the review with the first MHS annual report on
- March 31 last year, when the Government was susbequently engulfed in the BSE
- crisis.
-
- Mr Swann, who had sold his veterinary hospital in
- Derbyshire, had previously been working for the Isle of Man government. In
- all, 12
- two-man teams, each comprising a vet and a meat inspector, were
- appointed by the MHS to visit abattoirs in England, Wales and Scotland. Some
- of the unannounced visits took place as early as 4.30am and Mr Swann claimed
- teams were soon recording chronic lapses of hygiene.
-
- The inspections were completed earlier than had been
- anticipated and by December 1995 the six full-time inspectors compiled a
- draft report of their conclusions, which was edited by Mr Swann. The
- 54-page draft was handed personally by Mr Swann to Peter Soul, then acting
- head of operations for the MHS, at the agency's head office in York.
-
- The draft was circulated for review within the Ministry of
- Agriculture, which was normal procedure. Mr Swann said yesterday he did not
- know who read it, although he assumed it would have been circulated
- within the ministry's veterinary section.
-
- The ministry said it believed it was not seen by Keith
- Meldrum, the chief veterinary officer, because it was regarded as a working
- document. "It was certainly not seen by a minister," said a spokesman.
-
- When Mr Swann met Mr Soul the following month to discuss
- the draft he was surprised by the MHS official's response. "Peter said it was
- quite a critical report when one of the objectives had been to provide
- recommendations and give advice. We were asked to look at it again to give
- it a more positive emphasis," he said.
-
- "We did, but in truth there was very little we could
- alter. We took out the odd adjective but we could not change the general
- thrust of the
- report. It would have damaged our professional integrity to have done so."
-
- The draft report was resubmitted to Mr Soul at the end of
- January last year. Mr Swann claimed he was told by the acting head of operations
- that the report "could not be published in the form it had been submitted".
- He said he did not know what had happened to the report, although it was not
- published as planned last March. Mr Soul's office yesterday referred calls
- to the ministry.
-
- In his statement to the Commons, Douglas Hogg, the
- Agriculture Minister, said Mr Swann's first draft of the report had been
- regarded as "rather unsatisfactory and not fully reflecting the views of
- others who had taken part in the review".
-
- The minister said Mr Swann had been asked to "recast his
- contribution" but had been unwilling to do so and a section on red meat was
- redrafted by another senior member of MHS staff. Mr Hogg said the final
- report reflected the "majority judgment of the professional veterinary staff
- who carried out the review". He said suggestions that important
- recommendations in the report had not been acted upon were "untrue".
-
- Last June the amended report was issued for comment to the
- Meat Hygiene Service industry forum - representatives of the meat and
- poultry industry, including the National Farmers' Union - and was made
- available to the public on request from last August.
-
- "There was never an attempt at any kind of a cover-up," said a
- ministry spokesman. He insisted that that any examples of "bad practice"
- discovered by the inspectors would have been dealt with immediately "well
- before the draft report was even written".
-
- Mr Swann said he had never seen a copy of the amended
- report so he had no idea how much it differed from the original draft. In March
- last year he became assistant chief veterinary officer of the RSPCA after
- failing to become head of operations for the MHS himself. Mr Soul was
- appointed permanently to the post.
-
- Despite the ministry's insistence that the amended report
- had been made publicly available both the European Commission in Brussels
- and Prof Sir Hugh Pennington, chairman of the expert group investigating the
- Lanarkshire outbreak of E coli food poisoning, said they had not been sent a
- copy. The professor said he was a "bit annoyed to say the least".
-
- The Meat and Livestock Commission, the agency which
- promotes British produce at home and abroad, said last night that it had not
- seen the report until Wednesday morning. This admission from the
- body which is drawing up plans for a re-structuring of the entire British
- slaughterhouse industry called into question just how widely the report has
- been circulated. "We have asked around and we cannot find any of our
- officials who has seen it until now," a spokesman said.
-
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 20:08:03 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Meat report cover up - part 3
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970306200829.2a37850a@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Friday, March 7th, 1997
-
-
- Hygiene fears threaten abattoirs with ruin
-
- David Brown assesses the impact of the controversy on a struggling industry
-
-
- THE row over hygiene in abattoirs has shaken an industry
- already facing economic ruin brought about by plunging profit margins and
- huge over-capacity.
-
- Plants which invested millions to comply with EU health
- and hygiene standards are among those poised to shut within a year under a
- ú70 million "slimming down" plan now being discussed by the industry.
-
- The Meat Hygiene Service report blames most problems on
- abattoirs where, to cut costs, speed has been put before quality. Much of
- the pressure for this has come not from profit-seeking but from the wish
- to avoid bankruptcy.
-
- The Meat and Livestock Commission estimates that out of 469
- licensed abattoirs in Britain - there are another nine in Northern
- Ireland - up to 30 major plants will have to close by the end of the year,
- costing about 2,000 jobs. These are among the most modern in Britain.
-
- The best abattoirs are running on profit margins of no
- more than two per cent, a derisory figure in view of the investment
- involved. Average
- plants are operating on profits of one per cent and others are making
- losses.
-
- Martin Palmer, head of abattoir industry strategy at the
- MLC, said
- yesterday: "We have a major structural problem in the industry. The plan is
- to fund the cuts with a levy on the surviving abattoir operators.
- Originally, farmers were reluctant to accept the possible closure of their
- local slaughterhouse, but they are coming to see that something has to be
- done. It's a bit like hearing your local shop is closing. You have to know
- that there is an alternative elsewhere."
-
- Abattoirs are a vital part of Britain's ú10.2 billion meat
- industry. In a "normal" year they kill about 3.3 million cattle, 19.4
- million sheep and
- 14.4 million pigs, but confidence in meat safety, severely damaged by
- the BSE beef crisis, has hit demand and profits. This year, as the
- emergency BSE cull lessens, abattoirs will be fighting among themselves for
- animals to kill. By the end of the year they will also face higher charges
- for destroying offal.
-
- Before BSE controls, this was sought after - and paid for - by
- rendering plants for conversion into animal food and tallow. The
- Government is subsidising renderers to the tune of ú118 million to
- process the waste but this is expected to end in months.
-
- John Dawkins, who operates a major abattoir in
- Warwickshire, said: "The public will get totally the wrong impression from
- this E coli
- controversy. We don't accept cattle that are too dirty. They are sent
- back to the farm.
-
- "We have regular inspections from the Meat Hygiene Service
- and we pay ú15,000 a month - ú180,000 in meat inspection charges to ensure
- the meat we sell is safe."
-
- Abattoir companies blame the Government for much of the
- industry's problems. They point to the fact that since the first of them
- began to adapt the higher specification EU export standards more than 20
- years ago, too many others were encouraged follow. Many slaughterhouses
- that did not modernise were allowed to stay in
- business.
-
- David Maunder, a director of Lloyd Maunder, an abattoir
- and meat processing company employing 800 people at Willand, Devon,
- criticised the Government for yielding to pressure from farmers and
- other critics and negotiating "derogations" which allowing some
- abattoirs to avoid upgrading their plants to EU standards.
-
- Of the 469 British plants, 224 have upgraded to EU export
- standard, 200 are exempted, because they normally slaughter no more than
- 1,000 cattle a year. The remaining 45 are still operating under
- "temporary derogations" to the EU standards which they should have
- implemented, originally by 1991, later put back to 1993. The result was
- over-capacity.
-
- He said it was unlikely that abattoirs would start washing
- cattle and sheep before killing them. "Washing livestock was tried in New
- Zealand but it was found that the bacterial counts in those carcases was
- higher than in the unwashed ones.
-
- "It is true, in the natural way of things, that animals
- can have traces of excrement on them when they are slaughtered. The main
- safeguard is the skill of the slaughterman as he prepares the carcase to
- ensure that none of this contaminates the meat."
-
- It was "difficult to deny", he said, that low profit
- margins and the drive for productivity by slaughtermen was leading to
- contamination of meat in some plants.
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 20:08:09 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Doomed bees' buzz-word is 'quack'
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970306200834.2a3773ba@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Friday, March 7th, 1997
-
- Doomed bees' buzz-word is 'quack'
- By Robert Uhlig
-
- BEES can quack and elephants' "rumbling stomachs" are a
- form of communication, scientists have discovered.
-
- Beekeepers have known for some time that the first new
- queen bee strides around a hive and pipes soon after hatching.
-
- Now, Prof Axel Michelsen at the University of Odense in
- Denmark has discovered that the unhatched queens "quack" from their cells in
- response to the queen's piping.
-
- To capture a recording of the barely audible quacks, a
- vibrometer was placed in the brood comb, where all the unhatched cells are.
-
- "It doesn't really make sense," said David Pye, emeritus
- professor of zoology at Queen Mary and Westfield College at the University
- of London. "The chorus of quacking noises from the cells attracts the queen
- who then kills the other unborn queens."
-
- Next week Prof Pye will play tapes of bee quacks and
- elephant moans at the Linnean Society at Burlington House to launch Science
- Week.
- The facts behind elephant rumbling were discovered by Dr Bill
- Lanbauer, research director at Pittsburgh Zoo.
-
- "It's long been known that some animals use sounds that
- are too high for us to hear, but elephants use infrasonic tones, two to three
- octaves below what we can hear," he said.
-
- Many people claimed they could hear an elephant's stomach
- rumble if they were standing next to it, but the noise they heard was the
- vibration of their inner parts as they produced vocal infrasound from
- within.
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Mar 1997 20:08:07 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Meat report cover up - part 4
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970306200832.2a378028@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Friday, March 7th, 1997
-
- How the wording changed
- By Robert Shrimsley, Chief Political Correspondent
-
- THE degree to which the draft report on hygiene standards
- in Britain's abattoirs had been bowdlerised can best be seen by looking at
- the difference in the two sections on animal hygiene.
-
- It devotes 10 pages to "dressing hygiene", discussing in
- sometimes stomach-churning detail the risks and recommendations. But the
- final report reduces those 10 pages to one page and just nine
- paragraphs.
-
- Crucially, while the E coli virus is mentioned in the
- draft, it is excluded from the final version of the report. On the risk
- posed by dirty
- carcasses, paragraph 7.17 on Page 19 of the draft stated: "Major
- faecal contamination on the carcass, due to poor dressing practices,
- is a serious cause for concern.
-
- "Dirty animals arriving at the abattoir are a cause of further
- contamination. Organisms, such as Escherichia coli 0157 and
- salmonella can be introduced into the plant on the skins of dirty
- livestock." However, by the time the final report appeared, this had been
- reduced to: "The inspection teams were particularly concerned with carcass
- contamination from the skin and from gastro-intestinal contents."
-
- The final version of the report makes no mention of other
- concerns. These worries included the washing of offal in "static tubs of
- water", and the fact that the "spinal cord was not fully removed from all
- bovine carcases", and that "bones containing spinal cord may be
- processed into animal feed, providing a possible source of infection to
- cattle".
-
- Date: Thu, 06 Mar 1997 20:42:40 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: FWD: The Grassroots Forest Appropriations Initiative (FY 98)
- Message-ID: <331F9CC0.17A8@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- TO: All Forest Activists
- FROM: Steve Holmer
- DATE: March 5, 1997
-
- SUBJECT: Reminder to Sign-On Grassroots Appropriations
- Initiative
-
- Thanks to everyone who has already signed-on to the grassroots
- appropriations initiative. There was a typo in the version sent out
- before: the Forest Service actually lost $234 million in 1995, not
- $134 million, according the White House Council on Economic
- Advisors. In addition, the Government Accounting Office testified this
- week that the agency cannot account for how they spent $215 million in
- 1995. A corrected copy of the grassroots appropriations initiative is
- enclosed. To sign-on, please contact Steve Holmer at 202/789-2844
- ext. 291 or email wafcdc@igc.apc.org We will continue to use the
- Initiative
- to educate Members of Congress throughout the appropriations process.
-
- Hill Receptive to the Initiative
- WAFC and visiting grassroots activists held meetings this week
- with a number of House and Senate offices and in general, our agenda
- on appropriations is being very well received. These positive responses
- should encourage us to aggressively communicate with legislators about
- these budget issues.
-
- Old Growth, Roadless Area and Riparian Protection Gaining
- Support
- In testimony before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources
- Committee Chief of the Forest Service Michael Dombeck stated, "The
- unfortunate reality is that many people presently do not trust us to do
- the right thing. Until we rebuild that trust and strengthen those
- relationships, it is simply common sense that we avoid riparian, old
- growth, and roadless areas." We hope to translate this statement into
- tangible policy to keep logging out of these critical areas.
-
- Sen. Craig's Workshops Underway
- Sen. Larry Craig's (R-ID) workshops to discuss his
- 100-page draft rewrite of all forest management laws have revealed that
- there is little consensus on the problems facing our forests or how to
- solve them.
-
- The Government Accounting Office (GAO) failed to support
- Sen. Craig's finding that the environmental laws and public processes
- need to be changed to achieve better forest management. Instead, the
- GAO reported that the real problem is that the agency lacks
- accountability and has consistently failed to obey laws and regulations
- governing their activities. GAO recommended that before any changes
- were made to the laws and regulations, the purpose of the National
- Forests needed to be better defined to help resolve conflicts that occur
- when management activities conflict with environmental constraints or
- other values of the forest, such as fishing.
-
- The Grassroots Forest Appropriations Initiative (FY 98)
-
- The Timber Logging Rider clearly demonstrated the Forest Service's
- lack of accountability: healthy, green forests were logged as "salvage
- sales," water quality was endangered in the name of "forest health,"
- and no record exists that even a dime from any of the salvage sales
- sold under the Rider made its way to the U.S. Treasury. As a result of
- the failure of the Forest Service to protect the full range of forest
- values in the National Forests under their management, both the
- ecological integrity of our forests and the well being of federal
- taxpayers were sacrificed.
-
- We urge the 105th Congress to take the following steps to restore the
- accountability of the Forest Service and protect the interests of both
- taxpayers and our natural environment:
-
- 1. Prohibit new roadbuilding on the National Forests by ending
- any appropriation for new roads and by prohibiting the use of
- purchaser road credits to build new roads. The elimination of
- purchaser road credits in the President's budget is a good first step.
-
- 2. Prohibit logging and road-building on unstable and potentially
- unstable national forest land. Recent landslides in the West have
- demonstrated the "hidden costs" to public safety and the environment of
- subsidized logging and road building on steep, unstable slopes.
-
- 3. Restore accountability by reforming or abolishing off-budget
- funds. There is a growing consensus that the various off-budget funds
- -- the Knudsen-Vandenburg (KV), Brush Disposal and Salvage Funds --
- must be either reformed or abolished. The Green Scissors Coalition
- urges abolishing the Salvage Fund and the Clinton Administration
- proposes new limits on this fund in the 1998 budget. The
- Administration has also proposed the creation of a new fund for
- ecosystem restoration called the Forest Ecosystem Restoration and
- Maintenance Fund (FERM). While we support the intent of the new
- FERM fund, as currently envisioned it would only perpetuate the same
- perverse incentive to log that plague the other funds. Instead, we
- support the Administration's request for $30 million of appropriated
- funds for restoration activities and urge Congress to appropriate
- necessary funds for restoration rather than creating another off-budget
- fund.
-
- 4. End money-losing timber sales. The annual report of the White
- House Council of Economic Advisors shows that the Forest Service
- spent $234 million more than it collected in timber receipts in 1995.
- "Generally, the Forest Service subsidizes timber extraction from public
- lands by collecting less timber sale revenues than it spends on timber
- program costs," the report says. According to the Government
- Accounting Office (GAO) the timber sale program lost nearly $1 billion
- from 1992-1994. For the sake of both the environment and the
- taxpayer, it is time to end subsidized logging on the National Forests.
- --=====================_857620084==_
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Steve Holmer
- Campaign Coordinator
- Western Ancient Forest Campaign
- 1101 14th St. NW #1400
- Washington, D.C. 20005
- 202/789-2844 ext. 291
- 202/682-1943 fax
- wafcdc@igc.apc.org
- Date: Thu, 06 Mar 1997 20:55:32 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Immune System Toxins Maim People & Wildlife
- Message-ID: <331F9FC4.450F@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- =======================Electronic Edition========================
- . .
- . RACHEL'S ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH WEEKLY #536 .
- . ---March 6, 1997--- .
- . HEADLINES: .
- . IMMUNE SYSTEM TOXINS .
- . ========== .
- . Environmental Research Foundation .
- . P.O. Box 5036, Annapolis, MD 21403 .
- . Fax (410) 263-8944; Internet: erf@rachel.clark.net .
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- . with the single word SUBSCRIBE in the message. It's free. .
- =================================================================
-
- IMMUNE SYSTEM TOXINS
-
- In 1987, about 45% of Americans were living with one or more
- chronic conditions (a term that includes chronic diseases and
- impairments). In 1935, the proportion was 22%, so chronic
- conditions have approximately doubled during the last 60 years.
- The majority of people with chronic conditions are not disabled,
- nor are they elderly. In fact, one out of every four children in
- the U.S. (25%) now lives with a chronic condition.[1]
-
- Chronic conditions can often be "managed" (helping people to live
- with the condition), but they usually cannot be cured. The cost
- of chronic conditions in 1990 was estimated to be $659 billion
- --nearly three quarters of all U.S. health care costs. (To get
- this huge number into perspective, it may help to know that the
- entire U.S. military budget is $250 billion per year.)
-
- Perhaps it is time we looked seriously at prevention as an
- approach to chronic conditions.
-
- Humans and other vertebrates (animals with a backbone) come
- equipped with a complicated "immune system" which PREVENTS
- diseases that might be caused by pathogens (bacteria, viruses,
- fungi, and parasites) or cancerous cells. We are constantly
- exposed to hundreds of pathogens in daily life, but our immune
- system recognizes them as dangerous and swiftly isolates them and
- removes them from our bodies. The immune system is a built-in
- disease-prevention mechanism that works hard to keep us healthy
- so long as we keep our immune system healthy.
-
- If the immune system is damaged in certain ways, it can allow
- pathogens to overwhelm our defenses and make us sick. Under
- other circumstances (which are poorly understood), the immune
- system goes haywire and attacks its host, causing major damage of
- a different kind, known as "autoimmune" diseases. These
- "autoimmune" diseases include insulin-dependent diabetes,
- multiple sclerosis, lupus erythematosus, schleroderma, rheumatoid
- arthritis, and about a dozen others.[2] In these diseases, the
- immune system attacks and breaks down the host organism, causing
- prolonged misery and death.
-
- A third class of immune disorders is "hypersensitivity
- reactions," or allergic reactions, such as asthma, hay fever
- (allergic rhinitis), and food allergies (to milk, egg whites,
- peanuts, fish, soy and other foods), some of which may be minor,
- others of which may be fatal.
-
- As early as 1984, the U.S. National Toxicology Program [NTP]
- (within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services)
- observed that chemical damage to the immune system could result
- in "hypersensitivity or allergy" to specific chemicals or to
- chemicals in general. NTP said damage to the immune system can
- have far-reaching consequences for an individual, leaving him or
- her vulnerable to attack by bacteria and viruses, at heightened
- risk of cancer, and even predisposed to develop AIDS.[3]
-
- Unfortunately, during the past 50 years, corporations have been
- permitted to release more and more industrial chemicals and
- consumer products that damage the immune systems of birds,
- amphibians, reptiles, fish, and mammals, including humans. The
- immune system itself has only been fully recognized since the
- 1950s, and it wasn't until the 1970s that all the major
- components and activities of the immune system were identified.
- Many of these are not well understood even today.[2]
-
- Partly as a result of this ignorance, public health authorities
- have still not established consistent criteria for measuring
- damage to the immune system,[4] which of course allows corporate
- polluters a lot of "wiggle room" when they are asked to stop
- releasing --or to clean up past releases of --immunotoxic
- chemicals such as PCBs, cadmium (see REHW #179), and mercury
- (REHW #462). (PCBs are a class of industrial chemicals outlawed
- in the U.S. in 1976 because of their dangerous properties.
- Unfortunately, large quantities of them persist in the
- environment to this day, affecting wildlife and humans.[5])
-
- A new study of immunotoxic chemicals affecting mammals appeared
- earlier this year in ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, a
- publication of the American Chemical Society.[6] Since 1987,
- large numbers of dolphins, seals, and sea turtles have been
- killed by disease in the Atlantic Ocean, the Gulf of Mexico, the
- North Sea, and the Mediterranean. (See REHW #399.)
-
- In this new study, researchers examined carcasses of bottlenose
- dolphins found dead on Atlantic and Gulf coast beaches in
- Florida, 1989-1994. They found elevated levels of tin, a toxic
- metal that has been used for the past 40 years to paint the
- bottoms of boats and ships to prevent the growth of barnacles and
- slime. (The specific tin compounds are tributyl tin, dibutyl
- tin, and monobutyl tin, together called organotin compounds.
- Tributyl tin is added to paint to prevent growth of organisms on
- ships' bottoms; it slowly degrades into the other two compounds.)
- The tin found in bottlenose dolphins was compared to the tin
- found in spotted dolphins, and pygmy sperm whales, which spend
- their lives far offshore. The bottlenose dolphins had higher
- levels of tin, presumably because they spend their lives close to
- shore, where anti-fouling paint from boats and ships has
- contaminated bottom sediments and local food chains.
-
- The researchers conclude that the tin compounds --which are well
- established immunotoxins --combined with PCBs and the pesticide
- DDT, which are also found at high levels in dolphins and which
- are also well-established immunotoxins --together may have
- deprived the dolphins of their main defense against disease,
- their immune systems. They then succumbed to bacteria and
- viruses that they had previously been able to live with.
-
- Other common agents and environmental contaminants known to harm
- the immune system include:
-
- ** Ultraviolet light from the sun --the kind of light that is
- increasing in the northern latitudes of the Earth because
- chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) have damaged the planet's protective
- ozone shield 10 to 30 miles in the sky. (See REHW #246, #441.)
- Ultraviolet sunlight striking the inhabited portions of the
- planet has increased 5% to 10% in recent years. In sum, we are
- now all taking a bath in a moderately immunotoxic agent.[7]
-
- ** Dioxin and PCBs. As mentioned above, PCBs are a class of
- industrial chemicals now outlawed in the U.S., but still present
- in many parts of the environment at toxic levels. Dioxins are a
- class of chemicals created as unwanted byproducts of
- incineration, metal smelting, and the manufacture of many
- pesticides. Dioxins and PCBs are carcinogenic and powerfully
- immunotoxic in many animals, including humans. (The
- International Agency for Research on Cancer [IARC] --part of the
- World Health Organization --announced February 14, 1997, that the
- most potent dioxin, 2,3,7,8-TCDD, is a now considered a Class 1
- carcinogen, meaning a "known human carcinogen.")[8]
-
- ** Agent orange --the chemical used by the U.S. in Vietnam to
- defoliate the jungle, damages the immune system. Furthermore,
- Vietnam veterans have an above-average likelihood of being struck
- by diabetes --a serious immune system disease. (REHW #463.) In
- the general population in the U.S., the incidence (occurrence) of
- diabetes doubled between 1964 and 1981.[9] It is worth noting
- that Agent orange is composed of two pesticides, 2,4,5-T and
- 2,4-D. Though 2,4,5-T was banned in the U.S. in the early 1980s
- for fear of birth defects, 2,4-D is still most the popular
- herbicide used to kill broad-leaf weeds, such as dandelions, in
- lawns today. After people spray 2,4-D on their lawn, it is
- carried indoors on the family dog and on children's feet. Once
- indoors, it contaminates rugs and carpets and persists for a very
- long time. (REHW #436)
-
- ** Many pesticides damage the immune system. In 1996, a study of
- pesticides and the immune system, published by the World
- Resources Institute (WRI), examined a growing body of literature
- from around the world, showing that many common pesticides
- degrade the immune systems of wildlife, and humans.[10]
-
- WRI examined studies of all major classes of pesticides
- --organochlorines such as DDT, organophosphates such as
- malathion, and carbamates such as aldicarb. All three classes
- were immunotoxic.
-
- ** Living near a toxic dump damages the immune system in some
- people, though these effects have been rarely studied. (REHW #272)
-
- ** Exposure to fibers of asbestos and fiber glass damages the
- immune system. (REHW #444.) These effects may be more common
- than, and perhaps more important than, cancer caused by exposure
- to such fibers, but have been largely ignored in favor of cancer
- studies.
-
- ** Organochlorine chemicals, including those known as "endocrine
- disrupters," damage the immune system. The endocrine (hormone)
- system strongly influences the immune system, so chemicals that
- mimic hormones may disrupt immune functions.[11] In addition,
- common chlorine-containing chemicals such as perchloroethylene
- (dry cleaning fluid), trichlorethylene (a common industrial
- solvent), and chloroform (created in drinking water when it is
- chlorinated to kill germs) can damage the immune system. (REHW
- #279, #365, #399)
-
- Since 1970, the U.S. has spent 98% of its health dollars trying
- to cure diseases, and only 2% trying to prevent them.[12] During
- this same period, many diseases connected to the immune system
- such as asthma (REHW #218, #374) and diabetes have increased
- dramatically, and deaths from infectious diseases (not including
- AIDS) have increased 22%. (REHW #528) These seem to be strong
- indications that immune disorders are increasing. Perhaps all
- these immunotoxins are having a cumulative effect.
-
- The U.S. government does not seem prepared to cope with these
- problems. To prevent damage to the immune system would require
- strong action to curb the release of immunotoxic chemicals into
- the environment. This would require a government that is
- independent of, and stronger than, the corporations releasing the
- chemicals. At present we do not have anything close to that kind
- of government.
- --Peter Montague
- (National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981/AFL-CIO)
-
- ===============
- [1] Catherine Hoffman and others, "Persons With Chronic
- Conditions," JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Vol.
- 276, No. 18 (November 13, 1996), pgs. 1473-1479. The data
- describe the non-institutionalized population.
-
- [2] William R. Clark, AT WAR WITHIN; THE DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD OF
- IMMUNITY (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995). Clark lists
- autoimmune diseases on pg. 123.
-
- [3] U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health
- Service, National Toxicology Program, FISCAL YEAR 1984 ANNUAL
- PLAN (Research Triangle, N.C.: National Toxicology Program [P.O.
- Box 12233, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709], 1984), pg. 157.
-
- [4] Anna Fan, Robert Howd, and Brian Davis, "Risk Assessment of
- Environmental Chemicals," ANNUAL REVIEW OF PHARMACOLOGY AND
- TOXICOLOGY Vol. 35 (1995), pgs. 341-368.
-
- [5] See, for example, Andrew C. Revkin, "New Studies Show PCB's
- [sic] Persist in Hudson, and Are Entering Air," NEW YORK TIMES
- February 22, 1997, pg. A1.
-
- [6] K. Kannan and others, "Elevated Accumulation of Tributyltin
- and Its Breakdown Products in Bottlenose Dolphins (TURSIOPS
- TRUNCATUS) Found Stranded along the U.S. Atlantic and Gulf
- Coasts," ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY [ES&T] Vol. 31, No. 1
- (1997), pgs. 296-301.
-
- [7] And see A.J. McMichael and others, editors, CLIMATE CHANGE
- AND HUMAN HEALTH (Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization,
- 1996), Chapter 8, especially pages 167-170.
-
- [8] According to the press statement, the new IARC finding on
- dioxin will be published in Volume 69 of IARC MONOGRAPHS ON THE
- EVALUATION OF CARCINOGENIC RISKS TO HUMANS. The IARC can be
- contacted at: IARC, 150 Cours Albert Thomas, 69372 Lyon, France.
-
- [9] National Diabetes Data Group, DIABETES IN AMERICA [NIH
- Publication No. 85-1468] (no place of publication [Bethesda,
- Md.?]: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public
- Health Service, National Institutes of Health, National Institute
- of Arthritis, Diabetes, and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, August
- 1985), Table 2, pgs. VI-4, VI-5.
-
- [10] Robert Repetto and Sanjay S. Baliga, PESTICIDES AND THE
- IMMUNE SYSTEM: THE PUBLIC HEALTH RISKS (Washington, D.C.: World
- Resources Institute, 1996). Available for $14.95 from WRI
- Publications, P.O. Box 4852, Hampden Station, Baltimore, MD
- 21211. Telephone: 1-800-822-0504, or (410) 516-6963. Fax: (410)
- 516-6998. E-mail: chrisd@wri.org.
-
- [11] William R. Clark, AT WAR WITHIN; THE DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD OF
- IMMUNITY (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), Chapter 8.
- See also: Phyllis B. Blair and others, "Disease Patterns and
- Antibody Responses to Viral Antigens in Women Exposed IN UTERO to
- Diethylstilbestrol," in Theo Colborn and Coralie Clement,
- editors, CHEMICALLY-INDUCED ALTERATIONS IN SEXUAL AND FUNCTIONAL
- DEVELOPMENT: THE WILDLIFE/HUMAN CONNECTION [Advances in Modern
- Environmental Toxicology Vol. XXI] (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton
- Scientific Publishing Co., 1992), pgs. 283-288. And, in the same
- volume, see Phyllis B. Blair, "Immunologic Studies of Women
- Exposed IN UTERO to Diethylstilbestrol," pgs. 289-294.
-
- [12] Speech by Gilbert Omenn, Dean, School of Public Health and
- Community Medicine, University of Washington, given at the
- meeting of Grantmakers in Health, Fort Lauderdale, Florida,
- February 27, 1997.
-
- Descriptor terms: chronic diseases; immune system; children;
- health care costs; prevension; diabetes; multiple schlerosis;
- lupus erythematosus; schleroderma; rheumatoid arthritis;
- arthritis; hypersensitivity reactions; allergies; national
- toxicology program; cancer; bacteria; viruses; fungi; parasites;
- corporations; dolphins; marine mammals; gulf of mexico; atlantic
- ocean; tributyltin; tin; pcbs; ddt; uvb; ultraviolet radiation;
- cfcs; chlorofluorocarbons; dioxin; carcinogens; iarc;
- international agency for research on cancer; world health
- organization; who; agent orange; vietnam veterans; 2,4,5-t;
- 2-4,d; herbicides; perticides; world resources institute; wri;
- toxic dumps; landfilling; asbestos; fiberglass; endocrine
- disrupters; endocrine system; perchloroethylene;
- trichloroethylene; chloroform; asthma; infectious diseases;
-
- ################################################################
- NOTICE
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