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-
-
-
- >Bangkok Post
- 5 June 1997
- Elephants 'died of chemical poisoning'
-
- No signs of disease or infection found
-
- An autopsy on two elephants found dead in Prachuab Khiri
- Khan last month seems to confirm initial suspicions that they died
- of chemical poisoning.
-
- Livestock Development director-general Suwit Pollarp said
- yesterday that the autopsy revealed ruptured blood vessels,
- acute bleeding in the lungs and the presence of Carbofuran, a
- highly toxic pesticide, in their systems.
-
- "The results are reliable because we conducted several tests
- using different methods but the outcome was the same," he said,
- emphasising that there were no signs of disease or infection.
-
- Carbofuran was found in the liver, stomach fluids and the
- intestines. When ingested the chemical blocks the functioning of
- enzymes leading to poisoning, nervous breakdown, diarrhoea,
- spasms and death if left untreated.
-
- Also found were traces of pineapple which the elephants, for
- long the bane of planters in Tambon Had Kham of Kui Buri
- district, apparently fed upon before their death.
-
- Locals believe the elephants may have been poisoned by
- pipeapple growers who were upset because the animals were
- destroying their crops.
-
- Mr Suwit did not rule out the possibility of an accident, but
- noted
- that no firm conclusions could be drawn until pineapple and
- water samples from the area had been tested.
-
- But it was sufficient to convince Surapol Duangkae of Wildlife
- Fund Thailand that there was a deliberate attempt to kill the
- elephants.
-
- "As far as I'm concerned, the majority of the 50-strong herd is
- fine. The crops are usually sprayed with pesticide but only some
- elephants developed illness which means that some pineapple
- beds were deliberately sprayed with a high level of Carbofuran,"
- he said.
-
- The search for a third elephant believed to be severely ill was
- continuing.
-
- A Livestock Department veterinarian said he saw the animal
- stagger, looking weak and leave droppings on the way as it tried
- to catch up with the herd.
-
- Officials believe it's already dead but no one has found the
- corpse yet.
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 15:12:45 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (UK) Sheepdog case in Britain highlights need for RSPCA
- Message-ID: <199706050712.PAA09812@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >The Straits Times, Life! Section
- 5 June 1997
- Sheepdog case in Britain highlights need for RSPCA
-
-
-
- BRITONS are famous for being a nation of soppy animal-lovers who worry
- more about the welfare of their pets than they do about fellow humans.
-
- Yet after almost 175 years, there is still a need for the country's
- most famous animal charity, the RSPCA (Royal Society For The Prevention
- Of Cruelty To Animals).
-
- Just last week, a farmer who triumphed in televised sheepdog trials was
- convicted of cruelty to five of his collies.
-
- Three of Mr Gwyn Jones' dogs were in such a poor state they had to be
- destroyed, and two others are being looked after in RSPCA kennels.
-
- The court was told that all the dogs were emaciated and dirty, had skin
- problems and were kept in unhygienic conditions. Heart-breaking pictures
- appeared in newspapers.
-
- Jones was fined 2,000 (S$4,600) and ordered to pay the RSPCA's costs of
- 1,750. But he was not banned from keeping dogs.
-
- This is something the RSPCA is battling to change.
- Mr Richard Davies, chief officer of the inspectorate, said in an interview
- before the Jones case: "I think it denies logical justification that one
- in four of the people we prosecute who could be disqualified, isn't.
-
- 'We certainly believe that anyone who has been accused and convicted of
- cruelty to animals should automatically be disqualified."
-
- Mr Jones was not disqualified because without dogs, he could not run
- his hill farm in the Welsh region of Snowdonia.
-
- The RSPCA says this is not a valid reason for allowing a cruel owner to
- keep animals.
-
- "Just because someone needs a car for work doesn't prevent him from being
- disqualified for drink-driving," Mr Davies said.
- He stressed that he was not complaining about the courts, but said a common
- sentencing policy -- where all those convicted of cruelty are banned
- automatically -- was the only way to keep a lid on burgeoning cruelty
- statistics.
-
- "We're not interested in fines or prison sentences. We want banning
- orders. That's the most effective way of keeping the cruelty rates
- down," he said.
-
- Dogs and cats remain the predominant victims, according to national
- RSPCA cruelty statistics published last month.
-
- Convictions of cruelty to dogs were up 16 per cent last year to 892,
- while a rising cat population saw offences against the feline creatures
- rise by 27 per cent to 235, a trend the RSPCA is keen to nip in the bud.
- "People genuinely believe that having a cat gives them fewer
- responsibilities as a pet owner. That's simply not true," Mr Davies
- said. "They are making a terrible mistake if they believe that cats require
- less attention, less love, less finance than a dog."
-
- He said economic hardship was a catalyst to pet neglect.
-
- "If you're struggling, vet bills can make a difference. Chances are
- people won't cut back on other areas.
-
- "It doesn't matter what animal you're having, you have to think it out
- carefully. It's going to be costly and it's going to be demanding of
- your time."
-
- RSPCA inspectors try to persuade cruel or neglectful owners to sign
- over an animal to their care so it can be found a new home.
- If the owner refuses, the animal stays at an RSPCA-run establishment until
- its case is heard and the court decrees that it can go to another home.
-
- Once in RSPCA care, the animal can start a "socialisation" procedure,
- and while some abused pets can take months to recover physically and
- mentally, others are grateful for a second chance.
-
- 'With just a little bit of care over a relatively short period of time,
- you can change a cruelty victim into a superb family pet. Animals are
- incredibly forgiving," Mr Davies said.
-
- The Millbrook Animal Centre in Chobham in southern England is one such place
- which looks after and re-homes animals.
-
- According to Millbrook's manager Tony Glue, the crucial factor is human
- interaction.
-
- 'If they were left in kennels all day, they'd go stir-crazy," he said,
- pointing to a row of around 20 dogs.
-
- Employers and volunteers walk the dogs, while a behavioural analyst
- deals with animals with emotional problems.
-
- The RSPCA is determined to prevent a recurrence of cruelty. That is why
- every potential owner is vetted thoroughly before being allowed to adopt
- an RSPCA animal.
-
- And anyone who thinks getting a rescue animal is a cheap option should think
- again.
-
- The cost of adopting an RSPCA rescue dog, which includes micro-chipping
- and neutering, ranges from 60 to 103, while a cat could set you back as
- much as 53. -- Reuter
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 15:12:51 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (UK) 'Tummy tuck' for tubby hamster
- Message-ID: <199706050712.PAA04590@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- 5 June 1997
- 'Tummy tuck' for tubby hamster
-
-
-
- LONDON -- A hamster is to have a "tummy tuck" to flatten its stomach
- after a crash diet in what is believed to be the first operation of its
- kind on such an animal, according to press reports yesterday. Nibbles, 14
- months, of Liverpool in the north-west of England, was left with so much
- loose skin after losing 15 per cent of its body weight that it trips over
- it, several reports said.
-
- The animal will be anaesthetised for the procedure, which will be
- carried out by a veterinarian today. -- AFP.
-
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 18:24:10 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (KP) Global 500 Winner Worries about Wild Bear Abuse
- Message-ID: <199706051024.SAA27689@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >The Korea Herald
- 5 June 97
- Global 500 Winner Worries about Wild Bear Abuse
- By Jun Kwan-woo Staff reporter
-
- Raising wild bear for health medications in Korea may create moral and
- economic repercussions here, a Korean Global 500 award winner said
- yesterday. ``World environmental groups, including the Asia Conservation
- Alliance (ACA), are poised to subject the nation to sanctions,'' Korean
- environmentalist Cha Joon-yeup said.
-
- Cha, 47, leader of a civic environmental group Earth Eco-Friends, is to
- receive a Global 500 at a ceremony to commemorate the 25th World Environment
- Day in Seoul today. During his recent trip to Tokyo for an ACA conference,
- he said that he believed that world environmental groups are pushing for
- sanctions against South Korea.
-
- The Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF), insists that Korea fails to
- conform to the Convention on international Trade in Endangered Species of
- Flora and Fauna (CITES), Cha said. South Korea joined ITES in 1993, which
- imposed a ban on imports of endangered wild species or their parts such as
- bear gall bladders or musk, widely used for Oriental medicine.
-
- ``But some 1,000 wild bears are now being raised by farmers across the
- nation, possible because they were imported from abroad before the 1993 ban
- on bear imports took effect,'' Cha said. Since last year, an intensified ban
- on imports of wild bear gall bladders has been implemented by the South
- Korean government, but abuse of the bears is still rampant, he said.
-
- ``If the abuses against the wild bears continues, the U.S. government,
- giving in to world environmental group pressure will activate the Pelly
- Amendment Act against the nation,'' Cha said. The Pelly Amendment Act
- stipulates that the United States could impose trade sanctions against those
- countries failing to conform to the CITES terms.
-
- ``The raised wild bears should be returned to the original habitats
- immediately,'' said Cha, adding that it should happen before the next CITES
- meeting. Cha is also interested in preserving wild plants. The Global 500
- award that the United Nations Environment Prog(UNEP) will present to him
- today also recognizes Cha's many years of work with Korean fauna.
-
- An example of his efforts was when he staged a hunger strike in a bid
- to protect an 800-year-old ginkgo tree at the foot of Mt. Pukhan in northern
- Seoul, in 1991. ``At that time, the ginkgo, 24m high and 9.9m in diameter,
- was at the verge of death due to a construction of a few nearby high-rise
- apartment buildings,'' he recalled.
-
- Thanks to his lengthy struggle, Cha was finally able to persuade
- constructors to lower the buildings by two stories, resulting in sunlight
- for the tree. In another recent achievement, Cha organized a massive
- campaign to preserve the nation's unique arboretum, or experimental forest,
- in Kwangnung, north of Seoul.
-
- The campaign, aimed at preserving the Kwangnung Arboretum, was also to
- secure the return of Korean redheaded woodpeckers to the forest. It garnered
- world support. Cha said that ``Care for Wild,'' which donated $3,000 to the
- cause, was one of the world non-governmental environmental groups joining
- the campaign.
-
- ``The award, hopefully, will provide momentum to spread a more
- environmentally-friendly attitude in society,'' Cha said.
-
- Date: Thu, 05 Jun 1997 11:05:07 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Clinton To Ink Tribal Wildlife Deal
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970605110504.006906e0@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -------------------------------------
- 06/05/1997 10:07 EST
-
- Clinton To Ink Tribal Wildlife Deal
-
- By SCOTT SONNER
- Associated Press Writer
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- Indian tribes will protect fish and wildlife on their
- own lands under an agreement being signed today between the Clinton
- administration and several tribal leaders.
-
- Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt and Commerce Secretary Bill Daley said
- the special order is intended to clarify the Endangered Species Act's
- application to 95 million acres of tribal lands held in trust by the
- federal government.
-
- It establishes procedures to provide tribes with technical and scientific
- support to develop habitat-protection plans while acknowledging Indian
- lands ``are not federal public lands ... and are not subject to federal
- public land laws,'' Babbitt said in a statement.
-
- ``For too long we have failed to recognize the needs of Indian tribes to
- be consulted and part of the process from the beginning, and the
- traditional knowledge they can share about species, habitat and
- conservation,'' he said.
-
- Babbitt, who oversees the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Bureau
- of Indian Affairs, and Daley, with jurisdiction over the National Marine
- Fisheries Service, scheduled a formal signing ceremony today with tribal
- leaders. The ceremony was to be in the Indian Treaty Room at the Old
- Executive Office Building next door to the White House.
-
- The secretarial order says the government ``shall give deference to
- tribal conservation and management plans for tribal trust resources that
- govern activities on Indian lands ... and address the conservation needs
- of the listed species.''
-
- It also recognizes tribal interests regarding access to and use of eagle
- feathers, animal parts ``and other natural products for Indian and
- religious purposes.''
-
- The secretaries said they will work with tribal leaders and within a year
- develop recommendations for uniform procedures to govern possession,
- distribution and transportation of such natural products under federal
- jurisdiction.
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 11:29:00 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Pat Fish <pfish@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Mazzola/Bear Under Weapons Charge (US Ohio)
- Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.3.95.970605110445.10647A-100000@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- According to Cleveland Plains newspaper reporter (Steve Haudak), Salvatore
- Mazzola is being charged with owning a "firearm under disability". Because
- Mazzola has a prior felony conviction for cocaine trafficking, he is
- disallowed from owning the .45 caliber weapon hs was found with.
-
- The reporter seems interested in why Mazzola portrays himself as a martyr
- persecuted by AR activists. In Haudak's interview with him, Mazzola was
- quick to point out that he was found not guilty of the animal-fighting
- charges in Utica, NY. If you have any further information on
- Mazzola, especially other states he's been convicted in, or run out of,
- contact reporter Steve Haudak at 1-800-767-2821 (and drop me an e-mail too).
- I have already directed him to PETA for back-articles on Mazzola's history.
-
- Pat Fish
-
- PS The reporter contacted me despite having an unlisted # in another state.
- He used a search engine, and apparently something out there is archiving
- AR-News, so be careful how much personal info you post. Nothing is private
- anymore.
-
-
- Date: Thu, 05 Jun 1997 11:58:39 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Admin Note: Mazzola/Bear Under Weapons Charge (US Ohio)
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970605115836.006dcdb0@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Should archiving of AR-News Digest be ceased? Currently, archives are
- available at: http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/digest/digest.html
-
- ***Responses via PRIVATE e-mail only.***
-
- (Those wishing to publicly discuss the matter, please do so on AR-Views or
- other lists.)
-
- allen
-
- >PS The reporter contacted me despite having an unlisted # in another state.
- >He used a search engine, and apparently something out there is archiving
- >AR-News, so be careful how much personal info you post. Nothing is private
- >anymore.
- >
- >
- >
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 09:17:56 -0700
- From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Newswire (US): P&G 'Spins' Lab Investigation
- Message-ID: <199706051614.MAA23628@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- P&G Suspends Testing At Research Lab
-
- CINCINNATI, June 4 /PRNewswire/ -- P&G issued the following
- statement today regarding video footage of animal testing, released
- today by an animal rights group. That testing was conducted at
- Huntington Life Sciences laboratory in New Jersey. Based on a
- request by the animal rights group, the U.S. Department of
- Agriculture has begun a review of this lab. It is not a P&G facility.
-
- We're very concerned about what we've seen on this tape. The
- uncaring and unprofessional attitude and behavior of the lab
- technicians, as shown, is unacceptable to us and inconsistent
- with our principles.
-
- We've suspended further testing at this facility until we complete
- our own investigation.
-
- Recently, this lab conducted studies for one of a new class of
- drugs we're testing as a migraine and respiratory therapy. Because
- such drugs are new, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
- requires specific types of animal studies before they can be tested
- on people.
-
- P&G's animal research is limited to the minimum required to ensure
- safety for people and meet regulatory requirements. It must also
- meet our own high standards for the ethical use of animals in
- research.
-
- All U.S. contract laboratories conducting animal testing for P&G
- are required to conform to strict practices of good animal care, as
- established by the U.S. government. Further, all studies
- conducted in the U.S. are required to comply with the Animal
- Welfare Act.
-
- In the U.S., for outside research, P&G works only with labs that
- are accredited by the Association for Assessment and
- Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care International.
-
- SOURCE The Procter & Gamble Company
-
- /CONTACT: Mindy M. Patton, 513-945-8039, or Donald P.
- Tassone, 513-945-8170, both of Procter & Gamble/ (PG)
-
- [Copyright 1997, PR Newswire]
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Note: The PR Newswire is a pay service that companies use to promote
- stories they'd like to see printed to various media outlets. - Lawrence
-
-
- Lawrence Carter-Long
- LCartLng@gvn.net
-
- "Nothing is given to humanity, and the little we can conquer is paid for
- with unjust deaths, but humanity's greatness lies elsewhere. It lies in
- our decision to be stronger than our condition, and if our condition is
- unjust we have only one way of overcoming it, which is to be just
- ourselves." -- Albert Camus, 1944.
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 09:23:33 -0700
- From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Newswire (US): P&G contract lab abused monkeys
- Message-ID: <199706051619.MAA24241@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- Forwarded from the Primate-Talk mailing list:
-
- PETA: P&G contract lab abused monkeys
-
- CINCINNATI, June 4 (UPI) -- People for the Ethical Treatment of
- Animals has filed a federal complaint, alleging a Procter & Gamble Co.
- contract laboratory abused and unnecessarily killed monkeys during
- product development tests.
-
- PETA officials, during a Norfolk, Va., news conference today,
- said an undercover operative videotaped technicians at a Huntingdon
- Life Sciences facility in East Millstone, N.J. -- the first time an
- operative was able to get inside a P&G contract lab
- .
- PETA said the 9-minute video shows workers slamming monkeys into
- cages, suspending monkeys in the air while pumping test substances into
- their stomachs, screaming at frightened monkeys, shaking their fists in
- monkeys' faces while the animals are undergoing electrocardiograms, and
- stuffing a bottle into a monkey's mouth as a ``joke.
-
- PETA spokesman Michael McGraw told UPI his group is asking P&G to
- immediately suspend all experiments not specifically required by the
- federal government and to implement a six-point program to alleviate
- animal suffering.
-
- Procter & Gamble issued a statement saying its animal research is
- `limited to the minimum required to ensure safety for people'' and is
- conducted ``with the highest standards for ethical use of animals in
- research.''
-
- P&G officials added, ``We have no evidence of animal abuse
- problems at this lab, but should we find animals have been
- mistreated...we would of course take appropriate action. Meantime,
- until we have all the facts, we've suspended further testing at this
- laboratory.''
- Lawrence Carter-Long
- LCartLng@gvn.net
-
- "Nothing is given to humanity, and the little we can conquer is paid for
- with unjust deaths, but humanity's greatness lies elsewhere. It lies in
- our decision to be stronger than our condition, and if our condition is
- unjust we have only one way of overcoming it, which is to be just
- ourselves." -- Albert Camus, 1944.
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 09:35:31 -0700 (PDT)
- From: civillib@cwnet.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: ALF CLAIMS CREDIT FOR FUR FARM RAID (US)
- Message-ID: <199706051635.JAA18251@main.cwnet.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- URGENT NEWS ADVISORY
- June 5, 1997
-
-
-
- Contact: Liberation Collective (503) 280-8916 or (503) 230-9990
- Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade (214) 503-1419
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Underground ALF Claims
- Responsibility for Fur Farm
- Raid; Calls It An 'Act of Love'
-
- PORTLAND, OR -- In a communique made public early Thursday, an
- international, underground animal rights organization officially claimed
- responsibility for the release of 10,000 mink from an Oregon fur farm last
- Friday and infliction of hundreds of thousands of dollars of damage on the
- Mt. Angel, OR ranch.
-
- The action was an "act of love...not an act of 'eco-terrorism,'" said the
- Animal Liberation Front (ALF) in its communique, sent to sympathetic animal
- rights groups.
-
- "Not one of the mink imprisoned would ever have been allowed to walk more
- than one foot in any direction, living their short lives (about 7 months)
- with an unpardonable death sentence," said the communique.
-
- The ALF -- which has a code of nonviolence, and in 20 years of operation in
- the U.S. has never harmed a human or nonhuman animal -- took issue with
- claims by furriers, spread by the media (despite no evidence to the fact)
- that "many" animals died during its operation.
-
- "In one evening freedom and a chance to live, was given to thousands of
- sentient beings. Contrary to lies of the popular media, no animals are
- harmed in any act of liberation. The objective is, and always will be, to
- save life," the ALF message continued.
-
- "Animals locked in cages don't have a voice, and so you may not hear their
- cries. They still feel pain. Murderers of the innocent have spilled blood
- for too long unchallenged...Now we will destroy the industries of torture,"
- said the ALF.
-
- "Animals have no time and we have grown tired of asking," the ALF said,
- noting the billions of animals who die for fur, on factory farms and in
- research labs. "Now is the time to end their pain, to do all we can do to
- leave our world in a better condition than it was when we entered it. The
- vegan revolution begins now," the communique promised.
-
- The ALF has in 20 years been responsible for thousands of actions, which
- have led to the release of tens of thousands of animals from research labs,
- fur farms and factory farms, as well as the destruction of animal abuse
- industries, including research labs and fur ranches. In 1986, the ALF raided
- University of Oregon (Eugene) research labs, and freed more than 300
- animals, including kittens and rabbits, causing $50,000 in damages to the
- labs. Lab photos "liberated" showed abuses of animals, leading the firing of
- the U of O lab director.
-
- The action at Mt. Angel (33 miles south of Portland) is the 29th raid in
- N. America -- including 5 in Canada -- resulting in about 45,400 animals
- being freed since the fall of 1995. An estimated 36,000 animals have been
- freed from the fur farms, in a dozen states, including Utah, Washington,
- Oregon, Ohio, Massachusetts, Texas, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan,
- Tennessee, New York and Maryland. Thousands of fur-bearing animals have also
- been freed in Germany, Sweden, Finland, Austria and Norway this past year.
- -30-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 13:46:56 -0400 (EDT)
- From: LMANHEIM@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, WLREHAB@vm1.nodak.edu
- Subject: TALK: Fwd: U.S. Troops To Guard Rain Forest
- Message-ID: <970605134623_677850830@emout06.mail.aol.com>
-
- WOW!!! Finally! A ~good~ use for the military!
-
- In a message dated 97-06-05 11:31:09 EDT, AOL News writes:
-
- << Subj:U.S. Troops To Guard Rain Forest
- Date:97-06-05 11:31:09 EDT
- From:AOL News
- BCC:LMANHEIM
-
- c. The Associated Press
-
- By TOM BAYLES
- MIAMI (AP) - Some U.S. soldiers are gearing up to take on new
- duties in Central and South America, helping train warriors for the
- environment.
- In at least 32 Latin American and Caribbean nations, members of
- the U.S. Southern Command - SouthCom - may begin training local
- soldiers to guard rain forests and endangered species.
- The new green duties are a dividend of the post-Cold War era
- that has spread democracy, not an easy transition for countries.
- ``This is a legitimate military issue,'' Timothy E. Wirth,
- undersecretary of state for global affairs, told the Western
- Hemisphere Defense Environmental Conference on Tuesday. ``This is
- not a bunch of trendy greenies.''
- The Southern Command, which is relocating from Panama to Miami
- in late September, is one of nine unified military commands and is
- responsible for coordinating U.S. military operations in Central
- and South America.
- Its varied missions include human rights, military cooperation,
- and border conflicts in the Western hemisphere, most with an eye
- toward environmental impacts.
- ``SouthCom is unique in comparison to other unified commands
- because there is a real need - when you look at countries that have
- shifted to democracy over the last few years - to show them guys
- wearing uniforms can be good people,'' said Navy Lt. Jane Campbell,
- a spokeswoman for SouthCom. ``It's vastly different from what many
- of the citizens have known.''
- The green warriors fit with the thinking that a nation that has
- its environmental affairs in order is positioned to reap the
- rewards of its natural resources and in better shape for the
- future.
- And the military already has people in the region who know each
- country's dynamics and the expertise to solve problems.
- In the Panama Canal, for instance, SouthCom could help officials
- preserve the fragile water table that fills the canal and keeps it
- free of silt. Troops could help turn the Colombia-Venezuela border
- region - the scene of a decades-long dispute stemming from
- Colombian guerrilla incursions into Venezuela - into an
- international park. And they could help preserve Brazil's rain
- forests.
- Liakat Ali Errol Alibux, Suriname's minister of natural
- resources, said SouthCom's possible involvement in his nation was
- welcome.
- ``We need international cooperation on our environmental issues
- to help sustain our development,'' he said.
- The United States benefits, too. More than 50,000 National Guard
- and military reservists train every year in Central and South
- America, learning to build schoolhouses and highways. The training
- is useful for those serving in a troop-support capacity, like
- bridge-building engineers.
- ``It's preparing people for stuff they may have to do in that
- environment,'' Campbell said.
- SouthCom, with 6,200 members from all branches of the military,
- is required by the Panama Canal Treaty to move its 800-member
- headquarters off Panamanian soil by the end of 1999.
- SouthCom officials hoped the conference helped change people's
- attitudes about the range of jobs the U.S. armed forces undertakes.
- ``People say humanitarian missions and the military are
- diametrically opposed and we say no,'' Campbell said.
- AP-NY-06-05-97 0940EDT >>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- Subj: U.S. Troops To Guard Rain Forest
- Date: 97-06-05 11:31:09 EDT
- From: AOL News
-
-
-
- By TOM BAYLES
- MIAMI (AP) - Some U.S. soldiers are gearing up to take on new
- duties in Central and South America, helping train warriors for the
- environment.
- In at least 32 Latin American and Caribbean nations, members of
- the U.S. Southern Command - SouthCom - may begin training local
- soldiers to guard rain forests and endangered species.
- The new green duties are a dividend of the post-Cold War era
- that has spread democracy, not an easy transition for countries.
- ``This is a legitimate military issue,'' Timothy E. Wirth,
- undersecretary of state for global affairs, told the Western
- Hemisphere Defense Environmental Conference on Tuesday. ``This is
- not a bunch of trendy greenies.''
- The Southern Command, which is relocating from Panama to Miami
- in late September, is one of nine unified military commands and is
- responsible for coordinating U.S. military operations in Central
- and South America.
- Its varied missions include human rights, military cooperation,
- and border conflicts in the Western hemisphere, most with an eye
- toward environmental impacts.
- ``SouthCom is unique in comparison to other unified commands
- because there is a real need - when you look at countries that have
- shifted to democracy over the last few years - to show them guys
- wearing uniforms can be good people,'' said Navy Lt. Jane Campbell,
- a spokeswoman for SouthCom. ``It's vastly different from what many
- of the citizens have known.''
- The green warriors fit with the thinking that a nation that has
- its environmental affairs in order is positioned to reap the
- rewards of its natural resources and in better shape for the
- future.
- And the military already has people in the region who know each
- country's dynamics and the expertise to solve problems.
- In the Panama Canal, for instance, SouthCom could help officials
- preserve the fragile water table that fills the canal and keeps it
- free of silt. Troops could help turn the Colombia-Venezuela border
- region - the scene of a decades-long dispute stemming from
- Colombian guerrilla incursions into Venezuela - into an
- international park. And they could help preserve Brazil's rain
- forests.
- Liakat Ali Errol Alibux, Suriname's minister of natural
- resources, said SouthCom's possible involvement in his nation was
- welcome.
- ``We need international cooperation on our environmental issues
- to help sustain our development,'' he said.
- The United States benefits, too. More than 50,000 National Guard
- and military reservists train every year in Central and South
- America, learning to build schoolhouses and highways. The training
- is useful for those serving in a troop-support capacity, like
- bridge-building engineers.
- ``It's preparing people for stuff they may have to do in that
- environment,'' Campbell said.
- SouthCom, with 6,200 members from all branches of the military,
- is required by the Panama Canal Treaty to move its 800-member
- headquarters off Panamanian soil by the end of 1999.
- SouthCom officials hoped the conference helped change people's
- attitudes about the range of jobs the U.S. armed forces undertakes.
- ``People say humanitarian missions and the military are
- diametrically opposed and we say no,'' Campbell said.
- AP-NY-06-05-97 0940EDT
- Copyright 1997 The
- Associated Press. The information
- contained in the AP news report may not be published,
- broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without
- prior written authority of The Associated Press.
-
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles.
- For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 13:47:12 -0400 (EDT)
- From: LMANHEIM@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, WLREHAB@vm1.nodak.edu
- Subject: TALK: Fwd: Govt. Defers To Tribes Under Act
- Message-ID: <970605134644_-1027852722@emout16.mail.aol.com>
-
- In a message dated 97-06-05 11:37:13 EDT, AOL News writes:
-
- << Subj:Govt. Defers To Tribes Under Act
- Date:97-06-05 11:37:13 EDT
- From:AOL News
- BCC:LMANHEIM
-
- c. The Associated Press
-
- By SCOTT SONNER
- WASHINGTON (AP) - Indian tribes will protect fish and wildlife
- on their own lands under an agreement being signed today between
- the Clinton administration and several tribal leaders.
- Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt and Commerce Secretary Bill
- Daley said the special order is intended to clarify the Endangered
- Species Act's application to 95 million acres of tribal lands held
- in trust by the federal government.
- It establishes procedures to provide tribes with technical and
- scientific support to develop habitat-protection plans while
- acknowledging Indian lands ``are not federal public lands ... and
- are not subject to federal public land laws,'' Babbitt said in a
- statement.
- ``For too long we have failed to recognize the needs of Indian
- tribes to be consulted and part of the process from the beginning,
- and the traditional knowledge they can share about species, habitat
- and conservation,'' he said.
- Babbitt, who oversees the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the
- Bureau of Indian Affairs, and Daley, with jurisdiction over the
- National Marine Fisheries Service, scheduled a formal signing
- ceremony today with tribal leaders. The ceremony was to be in the
- Indian Treaty Room at the Old Executive Office Building next door
- to the White House.
- The secretarial order says the government ``shall give deference
- to tribal conservation and management plans for tribal trust
- resources that govern activities on Indian lands ... and address
- the conservation needs of the listed species.''
- It also recognizes tribal interests regarding access to and use
- of eagle feathers, animal parts ``and other natural products for
- Indian and religious purposes.''
- The secretaries said they will work with tribal leaders and
- within a year develop recommendations for uniform procedures to
- govern possession, distribution and transportation of such natural
- products under federal jurisdiction.
- AP-NY-06-05-97 0952EDT >>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- Subj: Govt. Defers To Tribes Under Act
- Date: 97-06-05 11:37:13 EDT
- From: AOL News
-
-
-
- By SCOTT SONNER
- WASHINGTON (AP) - Indian tribes will protect fish and wildlife
- on their own lands under an agreement being signed today between
- the Clinton administration and several tribal leaders.
- Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt and Commerce Secretary Bill
- Daley said the special order is intended to clarify the Endangered
- Species Act's application to 95 million acres of tribal lands held
- in trust by the federal government.
- It establishes procedures to provide tribes with technical and
- scientific support to develop habitat-protection plans while
- acknowledging Indian lands ``are not federal public lands ... and
- are not subject to federal public land laws,'' Babbitt said in a
- statement.
- ``For too long we have failed to recognize the needs of Indian
- tribes to be consulted and part of the process from the beginning,
- and the traditional knowledge they can share about species, habitat
- and conservation,'' he said.
- Babbitt, who oversees the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the
- Bureau of Indian Affairs, and Daley, with jurisdiction over the
- National Marine Fisheries Service, scheduled a formal signing
- ceremony today with tribal leaders. The ceremony was to be in the
- Indian Treaty Room at the Old Executive Office Building next door
- to the White House.
- The secretarial order says the government ``shall give deference
- to tribal conservation and management plans for tribal trust
- resources that govern activities on Indian lands ... and address
- the conservation needs of the listed species.''
- It also recognizes tribal interests regarding access to and use
- of eagle feathers, animal parts ``and other natural products for
- Indian and religious purposes.''
- The secretaries said they will work with tribal leaders and
- within a year develop recommendations for uniform procedures to
- govern possession, distribution and transportation of such natural
- products under federal jurisdiction.
- AP-NY-06-05-97 0952EDT
- Copyright 1997 The
- Associated Press. The information
- contained in the AP news report may not be published,
- broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without
- prior written authority of The Associated Press.
-
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles.
- For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 10:03:58 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Mike Markarian <MikeM@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, seac+announce@ecosys.drdr.virginia.edu,
- en.alerts@conf.igc.apc.org
- Subject: Call CT Gov in Support of HB 6577
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970605130350.58af2cba@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- As I posted yesterday, the Connecticut Senate passed HB 6577 by a vote of 31
- to 4. The House of Representatives had previously passed the bill by a vote
- of 126 to 13. This is an overwhelming margin of victory for a bill that will
- stop nuisance wildlife control trappers from drowning animals, injecting
- animals with paint thinner, using body-crushing traps, and using other cruel
- methods of killing.
-
- Governor John Rowland now has about ten days to sign the bill into law. If
- you are a Connecticut resident, please call Governor Rowland toll-free at
- 1-800-406-1527 and leave a message asking him to sign HB 6577.
-
- Thank you.
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 15:03:39 -0400 (EDT)
- From: BKMACKAY@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: OnlineAPI@aol.com, CFOXAPI@aol.com, bisgould@idirect.com, MINKLIB@aol.com
- Subject: Dead mink bodies found!
- Message-ID: <970605150339_518672947@emout06.mail.aol.com>
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- June 5, 1997
-
-
- "Dead mink bodies found!"
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Anti-fur animal protectionist finds bodies of abused mink
-
- PORTLAND, OR. -- Headlines around the country claim that
- thousands of mink died or will die as a result of a secret raid on
- a mink ranch in Mount Angel, Oregon, on the night of Friday, May
- 30.
-
- But the claim has been hotly denied by J.P. Goodwin, executive
- director of the Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade, based in Dallas,
- Texas.
-
- "Numerous news reporters, including those from wire
- services and National Public Radio, have told me that the industry
- refuses to produce a single dead body...they can't for the obvious
- reason that there are no bodies," claimed Goodwin in a press
- communication dated June 6.
-
- Animal protectionist Barry Kent MacKay, of Markham,
- Canada, decided to check the claim. "I fear," said MacKay,
- "that resort to misinformation hurts the cause. We had a situation
- locally where Goodwin made a claim about a fur farmer's court
- testimony when there hadn't been any. Obviously you can't
- dump thousands of dependent baby mink out of their cages and
- expect them to survive. It's an unutterably cruel thing ironically
- in opposition to yet another unutterably cruel practice, the
- imprisonment of these poor animals in tiny, filthy, cage until they
- are gassed, or have their necks broken."
-
- MacKay is program director of the Animal Protection Institute,
- based in Sacramento, California, and director of
- Zoocheck-Canada Inc., and the Animal Alliance
- of Canada, both based in Toronto. He decided to probe
- Goodwin's allegations.
-
- "The cause of animal rights," he says, "is strong enough to
- stand on its own merits. I first talked to Brian Meehan, a
- reporter at the Oregonian, of Portland, Oregon, whose is
- assigned to this newspaper. He told me that he had no doubt
- at all about the mink deaths, but admitted he had not seen the
- bodies. "The area is a crime scene under police investigation,"
- he explained. "We haven't been allowed in, but we have talked
- to the investigating police." Meehan dismissed claims that there
- was an intentional cover-up, with mink bodies being hidden to
- conceal the real numbers. "I find it odd," he said, "that all
- these comments seem to be coming from some guy way
- down in Texas."
-
- MacKay made his next call to Detective Gary Perkins,
- "one of the police investigators."
-
- Perkins had seen the bodies of mink. "I didn't count them," he
- said, "but I can absolutely confirm that they are there and still
- turning up." He confirmed that the investigation was ongoing,
- and that a parallel investigation was being conducted by the FBI.
- He also confirmed that as of yet, there was no indication of the
- name of any group that might be responsible.
-
- "Not unexpectedly," says MacKay, "the biggest problem seems
- to be that the adult mink are fighting among themselves while
- it seems to be difficult to match young with their parents in time
- to save them."
-
- Will revelation that the mink deaths have been confirmed end
- the accusations. "Not at all," said MacKay. "People who deny
- the obvious, that dumping huge numbers of pregnant mink or
- mother mink and their dependent young is cruel will deny any-
- thing. Instead of conducting their own checking, as I did, they
- will cry foul, or cover-up, or simply call me names. I'm here to
- help animals. I oppose cruelty no matter the cause. Whatever
- happens, it's the poor animals, as usual, who are pawns in
- human affairs."
-
- -30-
-
- Contact API (905 479 9731; 916 731 5521)
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 97 14:07:44 UTC
- From: SDURBIN@VM.TULSA.CC.OK.US
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Guinea Fowl Drop in Texas
- Message-ID: <199706051905.PAA17751@envirolink.org>
-
- I found out where to call/fax on this from Karen Davis of United
- Poultry Concerns, Inc.
-
- Mr. Roye Pigg, President, Quitaque Chamber of Commerce,
- phone: 806-455-1200; fax: 806-455-1298; 1228. Mayor James Davidson,
- Phone: 806-455-1441; fax: 806-455-1222.
-
- Demand that the guinea fowl drop be DROPPED!!
- Ask Mr. Pigg and Mr. Davidson to cancel the plan to drop guinea fowl
- from a plane this Saturday. Birds are not well suited to being dropped
- from a moving aircraft no matter how well they fly! Guinea fowl
- are extremely shy birds and are not great flyers. There is no excuse
- for dropping a bird or any other live animal from a flying aircraft as
- a form of entertainment or celebration of the environment.
-
- THERE IS STILL TIME TO STOP THIS DROP!!!!!!!!!!!!!
- For more information, call Karen Davis at 301-948-2406.
-
- And, THANK YOU!!!
-
- -- Sherrill
- Date: Thu, 05 Jun 1997 15:11:29 -0700
- From: Sean Thomas <sean.thomas1@sympatico.ca>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: selling of live "seafood"
- Message-ID: <33973991.737F@sympatico.ca>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Animal Action is considering undertaking a campaign with the region of
- Ottawa-Carleton(capital of Canada, located in Ontario) regarding the
- sale of live crabs, fish, lobsters, andfrogs for human consumption. We
- have videotaped evidence of atrocious conditions, live crabs in buckets
- displayed on the sidewalk with no moisture, fish in filthy tanks
- suffocating...
-
- Our campaign would be for the city to recognize these as animals and
- create a by-law providing for adequate "living" conditions.
-
- If any groups have tackled this issue I would be interested in hearing
- the tactics employed.
-
- If you are aware of any other cities that have such regulations I would
- be interested in including these in our presentation to the city.
-
- Thank you for your time.
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 18:19:49 -0400 (EDT)
- From: BKMACKAY@aol.com
- To: Ar-News@envirolink.org
- Cc: OnlineAPI@aol.com, MINKLIB@aol.com
- Subject: Phone numbers
- Message-ID: <970605181948_877789765@emout05.mail.aol.com>
-
- Regarding recent media release from me pertaining to mink dumping in Oregon.
-
- There are five phone numbers which people usually use to reach me. Two
- represent my home office and the office where I work while in California.
-
- My home office number is 905 472 9731. I am also often reached through The
- Toronto Star, at 416 367 2000, at the Animal Alliance of Canada, at 416 462
- 9541,
- or at Zoocheck-Canada, Inc., at 416 696 0241.
-
- On the press release I also gave the office numer I'm at while in California,
- which is at the Animal Protection Institute, as I thought it was not as long
- distance for people on the west coast to reach.
-
- That has led JP Goodwin to conclude that I was speaking on behalf of API. I
- was not speaking on behalf of any organization. I was simply imitating JP's
- style of writing media releases in the third person with appropirate regional
- headings.
-
- However, apart from the The Toronto Star, a newspaper, all these
- organizations are advocacy groups who oppose cruelty to animals. None has
- taken a position for or against any other animal protection organization.
- Nor have I.
-
- The information contained in the article was written in my capacity as a
- free-lance writer, and is true, and was designed to correct the statement
- that no one has seen the bodies of the mink who were released. If I mislead
- anyone into thinking I was speaking as a member of a specific group; or that
- I was speaking on behalf of myself in opposition to any organization, I
- apologize. I only object to cruelty to animals, whoever does it.
-
- The press release went only to this board, however, if it generates any
- queries to me they will be answered as honestly as possible.
-
- Finally, any discussion should be taken to Ar-views, as ar-news is for news
- and facts, and the release was entirely factual.
-
- Barry Kent MacKay
-
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 18:43:57 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Pat Fish <pfish@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: P&G Exposed on CNBC, Newkirk vs. Dell
- Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.3.95.970605181837.13983A-100000@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- "Bull Session", the 6PM (EST) nightly financial program on CNBC showed
- somewhat graphic undercover footage of the abuse of lab animals at a Proctor
- & Gamble lab. The company issued a statement claiming it was opposed to
- such abuse. The anchor then hosted a debate between Ingrid Newkirk of PETA
- and Dr. Ralph Dell of Columbia University (columbia.edu) in New York. Dell
- also is with the Foundation for BioMedical Research.
-
- During the interview, a male anchor interceded in at least two instances to
- ask pointed questions of Ingrid Newkirk, along the lines of `would you use
- medicine that was/wasn't tested'. Dr. Dell also admitted that invitro tests
- are more accurate, cheaper and easier (good quote material). The debate was
- the typical sort, and though Dell left himself open several times, Ingrid
- Newkirk didn't take advantage of it (ie. he claimed that tests were needed
- for safety, whereupon a long list of recalled drugs and products which
- tested safe on animal but killed or harmed humans could have been
- mentioned).
-
- There is a chance that NBC and MSNBC might run something about this tonight.
- Bill Gates (Microsoft) may not allow much coverage on MSNBC as he's this
- hemisphere's largest investor of biomedical research.
-
- ================================================================
-
- Curiously, when I checked his host systems for his email address, I got
- fluctuating replies:
-
-
- ~>finger dell@cunix.cc.columbia.edu
-
- rbd2 Ralph B Dell Never logged in
- New mail.
- No plan.
-
- ~>finger dell@cunix.cc.columbia.edu
-
- rbd2 Ralph B Dell Last login Jul 21, 1994 from ttysb
- (rdell.nas.edu)
- New mail.
- No plan.
-
- I'm guessing his email is rbd2@columbia.edu
-
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 14:56:00 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Mike Markarian <MikeM@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, seac+announce@ecosys.drdr.virginia.edu,
- en.alerts@conf.igc.apc.org
- Subject: CT Legislature Bans Drowning of Wildlife
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970605175606.5b7f8d0a@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Friday, June 6, 1997
-
- CONTACT: Laura Simon, (203) 393-3669
- Julie Lewin, (860) 521-7290
-
- LEGISLATURE BANS DROWNING OF WILDLIFE
- Connecticut Bill Sets National Precedent for Nuisance Wildlife Industry
-
- HARTFORD, CT -- The Connecticut Legislature set a national precedent this
- week by passing House Bill 6577, which will prevent nuisance wildlife
- control trappers from drowning wildlife and using other cruel methods of
- killing. The bill, which was supported by the Connecticut Humane Legislation
- Coalition, was approved by the House of Representatives 126 to 13, and was
- approved by the Senate this week 31 to 4. It now awaits Governor John
- Rowland's signature.
-
- The bill was triggered by public outrage in September, when nuisance trapper
- Michael Lipsett was arrested for animal cruelty after drowning two raccoons
- at a West Haven public marina. Lipsett's defense was that this practice is
- common and not prohibited by law. Nuisance wildlife trappers are licensed by
- the Department of Environmental Protection and can charge a fee -- usually
- hundreds of dollars -- for removing wild animals from people's homes. Many
- nuisance trappers commonly drown animals in 55-gallon steel drums in their
- offices or vans.
-
- House Bill 6577 will require that nuisance trappers follow the humane
- euthanasia guidelines of the American Veterinary Medical Association and
- that they receive mandatory training in nonlethal methods of resolving
- wildlife nuisance problems. A "truth in advertising" clause states that
- nuisance trappers cannot falsely advertise their services as "humane" unless
- they really are.
-
- Says Julie Lewin, Connecticut Coordinator for The Fund for Animals,
- "Nuisance control has gone out of control, and this is the first time
- nationwide a state legislature has halted these cruel killing methods. The
- trapping and hunting lobbyists fought the bill, but public involvement
- forced this legislative victory. This shows that the voice of the people can
- make a difference."
-
- The Fund for Animals' wildlife hotline in Connecticut received complaints
- from citizens who were upset about the cruel and unnecessary killing methods
- used by nuisance trappers. Says Laura Simon, The Fund's Urban Wildlife
- Director who staffs the hotline, "People want to see animals treated
- humanely, even in those situations when the animal may be perceived as a
- nuisance. There's no excuse for nuisance trappers to use barbaric methods
- when humane alternatives exist." The hotline teaches people how to block
- entry holes and use repellents to evict animal families.
-
- The Connecticut Humane Legislative Coalition includes The Fund for Animals,
- the Connecticut Wildlife Rehabilitators Association, the Connecticut Humane
- Society, the Humane Society of the U.S., Teaching Animal Awareness in
- Legislation, AWARE, Protectors of Animals, and MEOW.
-
- -- 30 --
-
- Date: Fri, 6 Jun 1997 09:42:29 +0000
- From: "Karen Bevis" <KBevis@swin.edu.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Sugargliders for Sale (US)
- Message-ID: <199706052340.AA01313@lucy.swin.edu.au>
-
- I have had a request for assistance via our web-site in Australia
- regarding a sugarglider (native Australian animinal) that is for sale
- in Portland. I have tracked down some information on the internet
- that the sale of sugargliders as pets is legal in some states of
- America. Could anyone local please let me know of laws in Portland -
- this poor creature is not being kept in appropriate conditions.
- Please email me privately with any advice. The person who saw it is
- keen to take some action.
-
- Following is the correspondence I received:
-
- >hi.. my name is andrea grimshaw.. i have a friend in america at the
- >moment.. portland to be exact.. she found in a pet shop over there
- >one of our beautiful sugargliders.. she is really upset about it..
- >this sugarglider was in a cage that was wire on all sides even the
- >floor.. no branches no leaves.. and she said it was huddled in the
- >corner really sad.. she wants to know what rights that sugar glider
- >has and what she can do to help.. it is going for $300.. she wants to
- >know if it is illegal what the shop owner is doing..? also where
- >sugargliders actually come from? and if there is someone in america
- >that can help her.. and who? i hope u can help us..
-
- After I responded asking for more details I received this email from
- the 'friend in America'
-
- >Hi Im the friend in question that andrea is talking about....
- >The glider is in a shop called SCAMPS and thats in the lloyd
- >centre in portland...I could find out the exact adress if you like..
- >Whilst the petshop looks clean and well run this,this possum is being
- >kept in a bird cage without and foliage or no floor litter I just
- >looked at it and instantly felt outraged that one of our fragile
- >creatures should be forced to live in such an enviroment instead of
- >the australian bush where it belongs.. I just cant believe this is
- >legal and would like to find out if they are breeding them here or if
- >its coming from an illegal source. If it is illegal I would be
- >prepared to purchase it and send it back to Australia...I would like
- >some direction on this issue...
-
- >leanne...
-
- Karen Bevis
-
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Karen Bevis
- Animal Liberation (Victoria) Net Site Co-ordinator
- Email: kbevis@swin.edu.au
- http://www.vicnet.net.au/~animals/alibvic/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
- "Vegetarianism won't cost the earth"
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 20:58:26 -0400 (EDT)
- From: No1BadGrl@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Pine Needle-Related Calf Deaths
- Message-ID: <970605205817_116921516@emout03.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- Subj: Pine Needle-Related Calf Deaths
- Date: 97-06-04 08:53:57 EDT
- From: AOL News
-
-
-
- IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) - Researchers are a step closer to
- preventing a costly loss of newborn calves from cattle with a taste
- for pine needles.
- Scientists at the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and
- an Agriculture Department research center in Montana have
- discovered in Ponderosa pine needles a group of previously
- unclassified organic compounds that cause the premature births.
- The process has taken five years. The next step is to develop an
- antidote for the compounds, which would allow cattle to eat the
- needles without problems.
- The problem is one that's been documented for some time: Late in
- the year, when grass supplies run low, cattle in the Western states
- start eating fallen needles from the Ponderosa pine tree.
- For some reason, eating the pine needles causes pregnant cattle
- to give birth about a month early. The underdeveloped calves soon
- die.
- Ranchers have known about the Ponderosa problem for about 25
- years, said John Rosazza, director of the Biocatalysis and
- Bioprocessing Center at the University of Iowa. However, herds are
- so large and cover such a vast area that it is almost impossible to
- keep the cattle from eating the needles.
- Ranchers are seeing losses in the millions of dollars because of
- high calf mortality. That prompted USDA researcher Robert Short to
- start investigating how the pine needles cause premature birth.
- Short enlisted the help of Stephen Ford, a professor of animal
- science at Iowa State, who fed pine needles to cows and monitored
- the impact. Ford found that the needles cause a decrease in blood
- flow to the cow's uterus, which in turn causes reduced oxygen flow
- to the fetus. The stress forces the mother to give birth early.
- ``We had access to the only such system in the world,'' Rosazza
- said of the equipment Ford designed to measure uterine blood flow.
- Ford has had a longstanding relationship with the University of
- Iowa so he enlisted Rosazza, along with researchers Donna Farley
- and Mohsen Al-Mahmoud, to isolate compounds that exist in the
- Ponderosa pine needles.
- Rosazza was looking for the compounds that cause the
- constriction in the cows' blood vessels that cut the blood flow to
- the fetus. Every time he isolated a compound, Ford would test it on
- laboratory cows.
- The search led to the classification of a new group of naturally
- occurring ``waxy lipids'' that the two universities and USDA
- quickly patented.
- Ford says elk are the only animals they've found that can eat
- pine needles without causing a decrease in uterine blood flow or
- premature births. Short is introducing bacteria from elk into the
- stomachs of cows, and Ford is testing the fluids that result.
- But these new lipids may have applications for humans as well,
- Rosazza said.
- ``These lipids are unique because their effect is not
- systemic,'' Rosazza said, meaning that they constrict the blood
- vessels in the uterus, but nowhere else in the body.
- In other words, the compounds have no apparent side effects.
- Constricting blood flow in the human uterus could help treat
- postpartum hemorrhages, migraine headaches and abnormal blood
- pressure.
- ``There's no evidence that this would work the same in humans,
- but we hope so, and it is possible,'' Rosazza said.
- AP-NY-06-04-97 0823EDT
- Copyright 1997 The
- Associated Press. The information
- contained in the AP news report may not be published,
- broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without
- prior written authority of The Associated Press.
-
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles.
- For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
- Date: Fri, 6 Jun 1997 09:00:01 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: FDA BANS MAMMALIAN PROTEIN IN SHEEP AND CATTLE FEED
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970606085442.2e17c9a0@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- FDA BANS MAMMALIAN PROTEIN IN SHEEP AND CATTLE FEED
- ***************************************************
-
- Date: Wed, 4 Jun 1997 11:43:21 -0400
-
- FDA Talk Papers are prepared by the Press Office to guide FDA personnel in
- responding with consistency and accuracy to questions from the public on
- subjects of current interest. Talk Papers are subject to change as more
- information becomes available.
-
- The Food and Drug Administration today announced publication of a final
- regulation that
- prohibits the use of mammalian protein (with certain exceptions) in the
- manufacture of animal
- feeds given to ruminant animals such as cows, sheep and goats. The rule
- will take effect 60 days after its publication June 5. The following may
- be used to answer questions.
-
- This prohibition is a preventive measure designed to protect animals from
- transmissible
- degenerative neurological diseases such as bovine spongiform encephalopathy
- (BSE) and to
- minimize any potential risk to humans. No case of BSE has ever been
- documented in cattle in the U.S. But if a case of BSE were ever found
- here, these measures would prevent the spread of BSE through feeds by
- precluding amplification of BSE in U.S. cattle.
-
- In January, FDA proposed a regulation that would have prohibited the
- feeding of ruminant protein to other ruminant animals. In a draft rule
- published April 17, FDA expanded that prohibition to include nearly all
- mammalian protein. Like the proposal, however, the final
- rule allows the use of products believed to pose a minimal risk of BSE
- transmission. These
- products include blood, blood products, gelatin, milk, milk products,
- protein derived solely from swine and equine sources, and inspected meat
- products which have been offered for human food and further heat processed
- for food, such as plate waste from restaurants and other institutions.
-
- By prohibiting nearly all mammalian protein from being used in ruminant
- feed, FDA believes it has made the final regulation more practical and
- effective. Pure pork and pure equine protein are excluded because these
- animals are not known to have transmissible spongiform encephalopathies
- (TSEs), and because the protein is processed so that it is not contaminated
- by potentially infective proteins.
-
- In addition to prohibiting tissues with the potential to spread TSEs such
- as BSE, the final
- regulation also requires process and control systems to ensure that feed
- for ruminants does not contain the prohibited mammalian tissue.
-
- The first case of BSE was reported in the United Kingdom in 1986.
- Epidemiological evidence gathered in the U.K. suggests an association
- between the outbreak there and the feeding to cattle of protein derived
- from sheep infected with scrapie, another TSE.
-
- Today's final rule caps a period of intense discussion about the most
- appropriate way to provide an additional layer of protection against the
- potential risk from BSE in this country. In the last year, FDA has sought
- comment on the best course of action by publishing an Advance
- Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, a Proposed Rule and a Draft Rule. The
- agency has received
- more than 1460 formal comments on this issue, and has held two open public
- meetings to discuss
- the most appropriate course of action.
-
- The current state of knowledge concerning TSEs is far from complete. FDA
- will continue its close collaboration with the scientific community and
- with pubic health officials, at home and abroad, on measures to reduce the
- potential risk of these diseases.
-
- --
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Fair is foul, and foul is fair:
- Hover through the fog and filthy air.
- - The Witches (Macbeth, Shakespeare)
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
- -Rabbit Information Service
-
- http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/4620/
- -Anita's Vegetarian & Animal Rights Pages
-
- The beef industry has contributed to more American deaths than all the wars
- of this century, all natural disasters, and all automobile accidents
- combined. If beef is your idea of 'real food for real people' you'd better
- live real close to a real good hospital.
- -Neal Barnard M.D
-
- I have learned from an early age to abjured the use of meat, and the time
- will come when men such as I will look
- upon the murder of animals as they now look upon the murder of men.
- -Leonardo Da Vinci
-
- If slaughterhouses had glass walls, everyone would be a vegetarian. We feel
- better about ourselves and better
- about the animals knowing we are not contributing to their pain.
- -Paul McCartney
-
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 20:59:18 -0400 (EDT)
- From: No1BadGrl@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Baby Rhino Delights Zoo Crowds
- Message-ID: <970605205914_1754349132@emout07.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- Subj: Baby Rhino Delights Zoo Crowds
- Date: 97-06-05 08:25:38 EDT
- From: AOL News
-
-
-
- SAN DIEGO (AP) - A 90-pound bundle of tough skin and grunts made
- a brave debut at the San Diego Zoo - until tourists approached.
- Then the 90-pound black southern rhinoceros hid behind his mom's
- thick legs.
- Admiring visitors finally got a glimpse of the rare rhino about
- 11 a.m. Wednesday.
- The rhino was born late Saturday and named Limpopo after a river
- that flows through southern Africa. Full-grown males can weigh up
- to 3,000 pounds and stand 6-feet high.
- Despite his still-rubbery legs, Limpopo appears husky. That's
- good news for keepers, who are trying to preserve one of the
- world's most endangered rhinoceros subspecies.
- The number of southern black rhinos declined by more than 90
- percent between 1970 and 1987, to only 3,500 animals from about
- 65,000.
- The proud mother is Chirundu, who was named after a town on the
- border of Zambia and Zimbabwe.
- ``Chirundu's parading around showing off her calf,'' keeper Ron
- Ringer said. ``And we're enjoying it. This is the first baby we've
- had around here for years.''
- AP-NY-06-05-97 0719EDT
- Copyright 1997 The
- Associated Press. The information
- contained in the AP news report may not be published,
- broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without
- prior written authority of The Associated Press.
-
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles.
- For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 20:59:49 -0400 (EDT)
- From: No1BadGrl@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Parrot Jungle & Gardens A-Flutter with Summer Wing Fling Butterfly Exhi...
- Message-ID: <970605205948_1990958924@emout19.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- Subj: Parrot Jungle & Gardens A-Flutter with Summer Wing Fling Butterfly
- Exhibit To O
- Date: 97-06-05 11:43:14 EDT
- From: AOL News
-
- MIAMI, June 5 /PRNewswire/ -- Parrot Jungle and Gardens will be all
- a-flutter this summer when it showcases more beautiful winged creatures in an
- all new butterfly exhibit. The special display will open on June 21 and go
- through Labor Day, September 1, 1997.
- The all new offering will feature a colorful variety of native
- butterfly
- species in an enclosed exhibit. Visitors will actually be able to walk
- through the lushly landscaped habitat surrounded by hundreds of butterflies.
- Of the 760 species of butterflies that can be found in North America, about
- 100 can be found in Florida. Parrot Jungle's butterfly display will feature
- Florida's most colorful butterflies, including Monarch (Danausplexippus),
- Giant Swallowtail (Papilio cresphonte) and Orange-barred sulphur
- (Phoebisphilea) to name a few.
- The exhibit's lush vegetation will feature brightly colored
- flowering
- plants and trees. In addition to adding beauty to the exhibit, the flowers
- will be a nectar food source for the butterflies.
- Accredited by the American Zoological and Aquarium Association,
- Parrot
- Jungle and Gardens is a world famous bird sanctuary, wildlife habitat and
- botanical garden. Opened in 1936, the park is a lush botanical wonderland
- with a diverse collection of hundreds of tropical birds, exotic reptiles,
- indigenous mammals and endangered baby apes.
- Parrot Jungle and Gardens is easily accessible, located minutes
- from Coral
- Gables and Coconut Grove, just 2 1/2 miles off U.S. 1 at 11000 S.W. 57th
- Avenue. The park opens every day at 9:30 a.m. For general park information,
- phone 305-666-7834. Visit Parrot Jungle on the World Wide Web at
- www.parrotjungle.com
- CO: Parrot Jungle and Gardens
- ST: Florida
- IN: LEI
- SU:
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles.
- For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 21:00:32 -0400 (EDT)
- From: No1BadGrl@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: U.S. Troops To Guard Rain Forest
- Message-ID: <970605210017_71186380@emout16.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- Subj: U.S. Troops To Guard Rain Forest
- Date: 97-06-05 11:31:09 EDT
- From: AOL News
-
-
-
- By TOM BAYLES
- MIAMI (AP) - Some U.S. soldiers are gearing up to take on new
- duties in Central and South America, helping train warriors for the
- environment.
- In at least 32 Latin American and Caribbean nations, members of
- the U.S. Southern Command - SouthCom - may begin training local
- soldiers to guard rain forests and endangered species.
- The new green duties are a dividend of the post-Cold War era
- that has spread democracy, not an easy transition for countries.
- ``This is a legitimate military issue,'' Timothy E. Wirth,
- undersecretary of state for global affairs, told the Western
- Hemisphere Defense Environmental Conference on Tuesday. ``This is
- not a bunch of trendy greenies.''
- The Southern Command, which is relocating from Panama to Miami
- in late September, is one of nine unified military commands and is
- responsible for coordinating U.S. military operations in Central
- and South America.
- Its varied missions include human rights, military cooperation,
- and border conflicts in the Western hemisphere, most with an eye
- toward environmental impacts.
- ``SouthCom is unique in comparison to other unified commands
- because there is a real need - when you look at countries that have
- shifted to democracy over the last few years - to show them guys
- wearing uniforms can be good people,'' said Navy Lt. Jane Campbell,
- a spokeswoman for SouthCom. ``It's vastly different from what many
- of the citizens have known.''
- The green warriors fit with the thinking that a nation that has
- its environmental affairs in order is positioned to reap the
- rewards of its natural resources and in better shape for the
- future.
- And the military already has people in the region who know each
- country's dynamics and the expertise to solve problems.
- In the Panama Canal, for instance, SouthCom could help officials
- preserve the fragile water table that fills the canal and keeps it
- free of silt. Troops could help turn the Colombia-Venezuela border
- region - the scene of a decades-long dispute stemming from
- Colombian guerrilla incursions into Venezuela - into an
- international park. And they could help preserve Brazil's rain
- forests.
- Liakat Ali Errol Alibux, Suriname's minister of natural
- resources, said SouthCom's possible involvement in his nation was
- welcome.
- ``We need international cooperation on our environmental issues
- to help sustain our development,'' he said.
- The United States benefits, too. More than 50,000 National Guard
- and military reservists train every year in Central and South
- America, learning to build schoolhouses and highways. The training
- is useful for those serving in a troop-support capacity, like
- bridge-building engineers.
- ``It's preparing people for stuff they may have to do in that
- environment,'' Campbell said.
- SouthCom, with 6,200 members from all branches of the military,
- is required by the Panama Canal Treaty to move its 800-member
- headquarters off Panamanian soil by the end of 1999.
- SouthCom officials hoped the conference helped change people's
- attitudes about the range of jobs the U.S. armed forces undertakes.
- ``People say humanitarian missions and the military are
- diametrically opposed and we say no,'' Campbell said.
- AP-NY-06-05-97 0940EDT
- Copyright 1997 The
- Associated Press. The information
- contained in the AP news report may not be published,
- broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without
- prior written authority of The Associated Press.
-
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles.
- For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
- Date: Thu, 5 Jun 1997 21:00:53 -0400 (EDT)
- From: No1BadGrl@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Family's precious pet gets death penalty?!!
- Message-ID: <970605210051_-663059891@emout09.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- Subj: FEATURE/ Family's precious pet gets death penalty?!!
- Date: 97-06-05 12:52:22 EDT
- From: AOL News
-
- SAGINAW, Mich.--(BUSINESS WIRE FEATURES)--June 5, 1997--
-
- Family Struggles to Rescue Beloved Pet From Senseless Death Penalty
- Fights To Preserve Their Home & Livelihood
- Day 34 - June 9th Execution Date
- Robert Jacobs' two children, Crystal (8) and Eric (9) are sitting
- at home while their favorite furry little pet ferret -- "Kodo the
- Kute" -- has just reached his 34th day on death row awaiting an
- unusual and illogical court ordered death penalty. Meanwhile, their
- father has been forced to leave work and fight for his children's pet
- in court. Moreover, local publicity from the struggle sparked
- Jacobs' landlord to deliver him a "notice to quit" his family's
- mobile trailer park home for harboring an "exotic" pet, even though
- the ferret isn't exotic (it's domestic).
- "I feel as if I'm in the eye of a hurricane," Jacobs sadly
- remarks. "I've always told my children that truth and honesty always
- prevail. But I don't know what to tell Crystal and Eric now.
- They're heartbroken. And honesty and truth isn't saving their friend
- Kodo from bureaucracy, ignorance and politics. My family is under
- siege. Most of all, my children are being unfairly and unlawfully
- victimized."
- Last month Jacob brought the family's pet ferret to a mall pet
- exhibition -- on the first day of National Pet Week -- at the request
- of local animal control officer Karen Burns. A senior gentlemen
- reached to pat the ferret when he accidentally scraped his finger on
- the pet's nose and tooth. The scrape broke skin causing minor
- bleeding.
- "The gentleman later humorously remarked to his wife, upon seeing
- a blown-up photo of a vicious dog bite, that his `bite' wasn't nearly
- as bad," Jacobs said, referring to the gentleman's court testimony.
- "But within twenty minutes, Burns, having overheard the man's remark
- to his wife, arrived at my area with a `bite report' which correctly
- stated `Minor, No stitches, Scratch Did Bleed.' Then she took Kodo
- away from me!"
- If the ferret had rabies, it would have died within ten days.
- But now Kodo is still alive more than 30 days since he was sent to
- "death row" at an animal control shelter. "Now, our pet is gone,
- facing execution, and we aren't even allowed to visit. My children
- are mortified."
- People around the country have rallied to Kodo's cause. And as
- time winds down to the scheduled execution, Jacobs and his family are
- hoping to save their pet's life and rescue their own life from an
- apparently silly and baseless government action.
- To contribute money to Kodo's plight, call Robert Jacobs direct
- (517) 777-4807, or e-mail him carrowor@concentric.net
- --30--mb/bos
- CONTACT:
- Robert Jacobs
- (517) 777-4807
- or
- Jackson Communications
- Bud Jackson
- (508) 469-9885
- beeper: (800) 936-0119
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles.
- For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
- Date: Fri, 6 Jun 1997 09:09:01 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: RABIES: HORSE - USA (MAINE)
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970606090342.2c874ddc@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- RABIES: HORSE - USA (MAINE)
- ***************************
-
- Date: Sat, 31 May 1997
- Source: Portland (ME) Press Herald, Sat, 24 May 1997
-
- The Portland newspaper has reported that a horse in the town of Biddeford
- was destroyed after it exhibited rabies symptoms ("unusally agressive
- behavior"). This is the second case of rabies in horses in the state; in
- February a case was reported from Kezar Falls.
-
- It is not reported how or if the cases were confirmed. But a young woman
- who cared for the horse in the recent case has been treated for exposure.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Fair is foul, and foul is fair:
- Hover through the fog and filthy air.
- - The Witches (Macbeth, Shakespeare)
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
- -Rabbit Information Service
-
- http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/4620/
- -Anita's Vegetarian & Animal Rights Pages
-
- The beef industry has contributed to more American deaths than all the wars
- of this century, all natural disasters, and all automobile accidents
- combined. If beef is your idea of 'real food for real people' you'd better
- live real close to a real good hospital.
- -Neal Barnard M.D
-
- I have learned from an early age to abjured the use of meat, and the time
- will come when men such as I will look
- upon the murder of animals as they now look upon the murder of men.
- -Leonardo Da Vinci
-
- If slaughterhouses had glass walls, everyone would be a vegetarian. We feel
- better about ourselves and better
- about the animals knowing we are not contributing to their pain.
- -Paul McCartney
-
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 6 Jun 1997 09:32:03 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: HEALTH OFFICIALS WARN OF BEEF SUPERBUG (Canada)
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970606092643.2c87e392@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Excerpted from FSNET (Doug Powell, Univ. Guelph):
-
- HEALTH OFFICIALS WARN OF BEEF SUPERBUG - CAUTION URGED IN FOOD
- PREPARATION
- AFTER 207 CASES OF POISONING REPORTED
- May 31, 1997
- Vancouver Sun
- Scott Simpson
-
- Here is another story from the superbug conference in Montreal citing Dr.
- John Spika of the Laboratory Centre for Disease Control as saying that
- federal officials have linked an antibiotic-resistant strain of the
- Salmonella typhimurium phage type 104 to 207 cases of food poisoning in
- Canada.
-
- The story states that Salmonella typhimurium is the single most common
- type of salmonella in food poisoning cases in B.C., but type 104 is a new
- arrival believed to have evolved as a response to use of antibiotics to
- treat livestock.
-
- Type 104 was first noted 13 years ago in Great Britain. There, the number
- of reported cases of food poisoning connected to it has risen rapidly,
- says the story -- reaching 3,500 in 1995 compared to about 150 when it was
- first identified in 1984.
-
- Dr. Jean Kamanzi, acting chief of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency's
- food-borne pathology laboratory, was quoted as saying that, "With the
- current technology we have for processing meat, we cannot assume it is
- free of contamination."
-
- The story goes on to state that the only [other] known outbreak of type 104
- in North America occurred in 1996 in Nebraska among a group of
- schoolchildren. But health officials were unable to determine if the source
- was contaminated milk consumed by several children, or a kitten or a turtle
- passed around during show and tell.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Fair is foul, and foul is fair:
- Hover through the fog and filthy air.
- - The Witches (Macbeth, Shakespeare)
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
- -Rabbit Information Service
-
- http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/4620/
- -Anita's Vegetarian & Animal Rights Pages
-
- The beef industry has contributed to more American deaths than all the wars
- of this century, all natural disasters, and all automobile accidents
- combined. If beef is your idea of 'real food for real people' you'd better
- live real close to a real good hospital.
- -Neal Barnard M.D
-
- I have learned from an early age to abjured the use of meat, and the time
- will come when men such as I will look
- upon the murder of animals as they now look upon the murder of men.
- -Leonardo Da Vinci
-
- If slaughterhouses had glass walls, everyone would be a vegetarian. We feel
- better about ourselves and better
- about the animals knowing we are not contributing to their pain.
- -Paul McCartney
-
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 05 Jun 1997 23:13:38 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: NC: Discipline in the Trenches
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970605231330.006ecdf4@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- posted for NO COMPROMISE
- http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/nocompromise/
- -----------------------------------------------
- This is just one of the insightful articles you'll find in the upcoming
- issue of No Compromise! Remember, if you haven't already, subscribe
- today!! Make a $15 check out to Animal Liberation League and send to:
-
- No Compromise
- P.O. Box 240655
- Apple Valley, MN 55124
-
- ================================================
-
- Discipline in the Trenches
- By Groose Rats & Co.
-
- Have you ever been arrested at a nonviolent protest for animal liberation?
- If so, read on.
-
- You have become a part of history, a history rich in nonviolent protest
- actions dating back to the Boston tea party, Harriet Tubman's underground
- railroad, Henry David Thoreau's refusal to pay war taxes, the suffragette
- movement, the labor movement, and Mohandas Gandhi's campaign for Indian
- independence from the British Empire.
-
- Being a part of history takes responsibility, and that responsibility is all
- about discipline. All militant forces have discipline. If we do not have the
- resources to set up animal liberation boot camps or visit them overseas,
- then we have to develop a strong sense of self-discipline to combat the
- forces working against our efforts toward animal liberation.
-
- Why Discipline?
- In addition to being arrested at organized protests, one by one, outside of
- the usual protest situation, we are being brought in by the authorities to
- be questioned, railroaded, harassed, threatened, and set-up. Seemingly
- unimportant encounters with the police have resulted in fellow comrades
- being hauled in for questioning, their homes raided, their computers and
- files taken, and more. We must be prepared for this assault BEFORE it comes.
-
- Discipline will prevent fear, loneliness, isolation, and insecurity from
- taking over and causing us additional stress that can lead to tragedy for
- the structure of our animal rights militia.
-
-
- Discipline in Ten Easy Steps.
-
- 1. [BOLD]Acknowledge and come to terms with the reasons you are in this
- movement. [BOLD] If these reasons stem from some unresolved conflict with
- authority, forget it and move on. The animal rights militia needs people
- committed to animals and to other activists within their affinity* or cell
- groups. (*Affinity groups are self-sufficient support units of 5 to 15
- people who work together toward a common goal. Whether or not you are
- planning to do civil disobedience, it is important to either form an
- affinity group or join an already existing one. Affinity groups serve as a
- source of support and solidarity for their members.)
-
- 2. [BOLD]Make a pact with your affinity or cell group. [BOLD] For example,
- my cell knows that I would never say anything that would incriminate any of
- them, no matter what. I also trust them to the same extent. This trust was
- built over many years. DO NOT TRUST ANYONE JUST BECAUSE THEY ARE WILLING
- TO
- DO CERTAIN THINGS.
-
- 3. [BOLD]If you are participating in a covert action, make your plan as
- foolproof as possible, but never think for a moment that you will not be
- caught. [BOLD] If you are caught, stay calm. Keep silent. Be prepared to rot
- in jail, but take comfort in knowing we are out here supporting you and your
- efforts. Prisons are not hotels. They can be hell holes and you might be
- harmed in one. Are you ready for this? If not, don't do anything that might
- land you in one.
-
- 4. [BOLD]Develop the ability to keep silent--in every circumstance. [BOLD]
- If you have an overwhelming desire to tell people what you have done, then
- you will eventually volunteer information to the police. They are trained to
- get information from people who don't speak. What chance do you stand? If
- you know someone like this, do not get involved with this person, period.
-
- 5. [BOLD]If you are arrested, be prepared to be separated and told lies by
- the police. [BOLD] Lies like: "All of your friends have bailed out,"
- "So-and-so is cooperating," "We are keeping you longer," etc. These lies are
- intended to make you feel isolated and angry=97angry enough to turn on the
- people who you think have turned on you. DO NOT BELIEVE THE POLICE! Have the
- discipline to handle the separation and take comfort in knowing that there
- are people supporting you on the outside. If someone has turned on you, deal
- with it. Do not make it worse.
-
- 6. [BOLD]Plan as much as possible. [BOLD] Before you participate in an
- action that might lead to an arrest, make sure that your life is in order.
- Make sure you understand the arrest procedure. Attend as many CD training
- classes that you can. Discipline falls apart when we are pressured to do
- something we are not prepared for. All our actions have consequences. If you
- follow the [ITALIC]No Compromise[ITALIC] philosophy, then you should follow
- through on it. If your affinity group knows what each person is able to do
- ahead of time, then chaos will be prevented. Activists who jump in for the
- fun or the thrill of the moment, might not be able to follow through on
- what others can do and this can lead to infighting and bitterness between
- activists.
-
- 7. [BOLD]Recognize that the best laid plans can fall apart at the last
- minute. [BOLD] Be strong. Have a plan B, C, D, etc. Or have a fall-back
- position, even if it is just knowing the plan can fall through. Be calm and
- resist causing additional stress by blaming it on someone or complaining
- about why the plan failed. The time to do an evaluation is later. Nothing is
- guaranteed.
-
- 8. [BOLD]If you are the only one arrested, be prepared to go it alone.
- [BOLD] If you were part of a larger group and everyone else has been
- released, stay strong in the knowledge that you will be out soon and things
- are not what they appear. Do not do or say anything you might regret later.
- Keep silent.
-
- 9. [BOLD]If the FBI, local police, or any other agency comes knocking at
- your door, do not let them in without a warrant. [BOLD] Do not speak to them
- on the phone either. Call Larry Weiss at (707) 576-1415. Preserve your right
- to privacy.
-
- 10. [BOLD]Learn more about what the government, private industry, and large
- PR firms are doing to destroy the animal liberation movement. [BOLD] Be
- aware of the tactics that have lead to other movements falling apart.
-
- We can explore counter-intelligence and the tactics used in another
- article. [Check out Anne Crimaudo's article, Informers Are Everywhere] If
- we are prepared, we are strong. If we are strong, we cannot be manipulated.
- If we cannot be manipulated, then in time, the animals will be liberated.
-
- [BOLD]Resources for further reading:[BOLD]
- [ITALIC]CovertAction Quarterly, Dept. MFW, 1500 Massachusetts Ave., NW,
- #732, Washington, DC 20005; <http://caq.com/CAQ/CAQ.html>.
-
- [ITALIC]Free the Animals! : The Untold Story of the U.S. Animal Liberation
- =46ront and It Founder, 'Valerie' by Ingrid Newkirk
-
- Institute for Global Communications, East Coast Office, 1731 Connecticut
- Ave. NW, Suite 400, Washington, DC 20009; <http://www.igc.org/igc/>.
-
- Nonviolence International, P.O. Box 39127, Friendship Station, N.W.,
- Washington, DC 20016; <http://www.igc.apc.org/nonviolence/>.
-
- Nonviolent Civil Disobedience Handbook--
- <http://www.comedia.com/Hot/activism/nvcdh/>.
-
-
-
-
-
- Check out the new No Compromise Web Page at
- http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/nocompromise/
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- FREE ALL ANIMAL LIBERATION PRISONERS OF WAR!!!!!!!
-
- ZERO TOLERANCE FOR TRAITORS!!!!
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-
- *NOTE TO UNINTENDED RECEIPIENTS - This message is intended only for the use
- of the individual or entity to which it is addressed, and may contain
- information that is priveleged, confidential and exempt from disclosure
- under applicable law. Any other distribution, copying or disclosure is
- strictly prohibited. Nothing within this message should be construed as
- endorsing, promoting or abeiting any illegal or unethical activity.
-
-
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