"Shooters and activists unite
to oppose battery cages"
Animal Aid has achieved a major breakthrough in
our five year campaign to ban all 'sport' shooting. The following
coverage comes from the Guardian (January 29, 2005):
An organisation that represents and promotes game
shooting has condemned its own members for the "horrific conditions"
in which they rear pheasants so that country estates can charge
"visiting guns" £1,000 a day to shoot them. In an
unprecedented alliance, the British Association for Shooting and
Conservation (BASC) is joining forces with Animal Aid, an organisation
dedicated to banning their sport, to issue a joint call on Monday
for a ban on battery cages for pheasant breeding.
The council of the BASC has thanked Animal Aid for providing video
and other evidence that convinced it it had to take a stand against
the battery cages in which millions of pheasants are reared each
year so they can be shot.
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Cutting from Saturday's Guardian. See also our press
release and the pheasant
index.
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| This type of cage is banned for chickens
and other birds reared for food. But the pheasants are considered
by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs to be
reared for sport, not human consumption, so the system is exempt
from such rules.
Birds are kept in small wire cages, and some wear hoods to prevent
them from pecking each other to death. The eggs and chicks produced
are sold on to country estates for about £1 each. The estates
fatten up the pheasants and release them in September, around a
month before the shooting season starts. Guns typically shoot up
to 50 brace a day, but they cannot eat all the birds they shoot,
so some are buried. The shooting season ends next week.
BASC's council, which is elected from its 122,000 members, said
it would work for the removal of the battery cage system and consult
with members about ways to safeguard the welfare of the 25m birds
a year that are bred to be shot. It said that they were being reared
in "appalling conditions".
"Council states unequivocally, on the basis of what has been
presented to us so far, that battery-type cage laying systems for
pheasants and partridges are incompatible with the values of BASC
and the future of game shooting," the association said in a
statement.
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The pheasant production operation in Bettws Hall, Powys. An estimated
25% of all birds delivered annually to shooting estates are reared
in units such as this.
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| Its spokesman, Simon Clarke, added:
"BASC has taken a strong and principled stand against the use
of battery-type cages. We urge all our members to check the provenance
of their birds and to refuse to buy them if the originate from a
cage system. As people turn to locally produced food, reared in
an ethical and sympathetic way, it is counter-productive for shooting
sports to take the retrograde step of introducing battery-type rearing
systems."
Mr Clarke said that Animal Aid had provided convincing evidence
of birds being stressed and physically damaged. "Over-treading
and feather-pecking are particular concerns," he said.
While domesticated poultry could adapt to intensive production,
pheasants were naturally more aggressive and Animal Aid's photographic
evidence showed birds in an obviously distressed state, Mr Clarke
said. He said the battery system made the eggs 10p each cheaper,
and that the system had been introduced by the French, who were
exporting eggs to the UK and undercutting local producers. To compete,
some British members had adopted the same methods. He said that
BASC condemned this, and did not believe sportsmen would want birds
to be reared in such conditions.
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This male breeder has been feather-pecked despite his female cagemates
having been fitted with face masks.
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| Andrew Tyler, the director of Animal
Aid, said that the hundreds of battery cages the organisation had
filmed in Wales extended over an area of two football pitches and
contained thousands of birds in poor condition - "pecked, plucked,
bloody and trampled".
"We think the breeding of birds for the pleasure of shooting
them is an outrage anyway," he said. "Our opposition to
such practices and to 'game' bird killing in general is more than
vindicated, in our view, by this unprecedented and welcome public
statement by the BASC."
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