The images
in the following program
are highly sensitive
and may be
as disturbing to viewers
as they were to us.
However,
we have to show the truth
about cruelty to animals
praying that
you will help to stop it.
His name is Chico.
He’s 28 years old
and Chico came to us
about three years ago
from a woman who
didn't want him anymore.
We came to see him
and he was just about
300 pounds underweight.
The caregivers had
20 other horses, they
didn’t want to feed him.
So we took him.
We put him back in health
and now
he is feeling really good.
This is Stop Animal Cruelty
on Supreme Master
Television.
Throughout history
horses have been revered
for their beauty, grace
and nobility,
with countless artworks
depicting these
magnificent beings,
whose presence
fills us with a sense
of peace and tranquility.
Sadly some treat
the wise, intelligent horse
with brutality.
Each year countless
equines are forced to race,
transport heavy loads or
serve as breeding machines.
Then when these
hard-working animals
become too old, sick
or injured to serve,
they are sent to slaughter.
On today's episode,
we’ll examine
the absolutely
unacceptable abuse
of our horse friends.
In one type of racing
called steeple chasing
or jumps racing,
horses run at full speed
over hurdles, fences
and bodies of water.
And during
these dangerous events,
the animals are often
seriously injured.
Elio Celotto,
campaign manager
for the Coalition for the
Protection of Racehorses,
has been monitoring
jumps racing in the state
of Victoria, Australia.
We’ve just seen 12 races
run so far this year and
after the implementation
of the supposedly
safest jumps in the world,
we’ve seen the fall rate
more than double
what is the acceptable
fall rate for jumps racing
according to Racing
Victoria Limited (RVL).
The death rate is also
double the acceptable rate.
The only safe obstacle
is one that is not placed
in front of a horse.
Given that the lives
of horses are jeopardized
by jumps racing,
the vast majority
of Australian states
have already banned
the holding of such events.
Many horses
sustain injuries.
They might appear okay,
just like a footballer might
get up after an injury
and then later on
finds out that
the injury may be serious.
And you never
see him again.
And our statistics show
that three out of four horses
that compete
in jumps racing do not
appear the following year.
So it is not just the horses
who die on the track,
it’s three quarters
that compete
throughout the year.
Other racing styles
include flat racing, where
horses ridden by jockeys
run around a flat track,
and harness racing,
where a horse pulls
a small cart or sulky.
From the beginning to
the end of their short lives,
the spirited,
highly refined equines
running in these races
face constant danger
and exploitation.
Rose Blickstead, founder
of the Refuge RR for Horses
in Ontario, Canada
now explains some
of the appalling practices
of the horse race industry.
The standard-breed
industry horses,
they start racing them
before they're two years old.
They start training them
at about 1.5 years old.
A lot of times,
they’re injured and
they can’t even be used.
So before
they are two years old,
they were sent
to slaughter because
they either break bones,
pull ligaments, or anything.
If they’re fast enough to
race, they’re raced a lot.
Every racer has an owner,
a trainer, a driver,
a groom and a chemist;
and the chemist
is to give artificial drugs
to enhance
their performance.
I’ve even had a call
from a guy who said
that there was a horse
who was given cocaine.
And a week later
the horse was still
hitting his head against
the side of the wall
because he was driven
out of his mind.
It’s a cruel industry.
They have very short lives.
The ones
who make it through,
and then after that
if they can’t use them
for breeding
they’re sent to slaughter.
It’s not only
unwanted horses
from the racing industry
who end up
at the slaughterhouse.
An equine is
a large animal, requiring
considerable care
including large quantities
of food, veterinary care and
a large space for shelter,
all of which are costly.
Thus when she’s considered
no longer of use,
even after many, many
years of selfless service,
a gentle horse may be
sent off to slaughter.
The pony beside,
on the other side,
she’s 32 year old.
She was used
as a school horse
to teach kids how to ride.
And she became blind
in one eye and they
didn’t want her anymore.
And after 30 years
of work for them,
they decided they’re going
ship her to slaughter.
The two colored horses
there, the pink,
he’s completely blind,
and he’s been blind since
he was six months old.
And the only reason
he’s blind is because
his owner decided
that they didn’t want
to buy a CAD$6
tube of eye cream.
So he went
completely blind.
Just because they’re blind
or they have arthritis,
they still love to play,
I mean that guy, he just
jumped the fence today.
It’s not a handicap.
You adjust and you live.
In the United States,
horse slaughterhouses
have been banned,
but now horses are being
transported to abattoirs
in Canada or Mexico.
After the last remaining
American horse
slaughtering facilities
were closed in 2006,
it was found a year later
that the number of horses
being sent to Mexico
from the US for killing
jumped 312%.
Currently at least 50%
of all horses murdered
in Canadian abattoirs
originate from the US.
There is a big
horse slaughter industry
in this country.
The United States has
banned the slaughter
of horses for meat.
And as a result there are
still some horses
that are being shipped
out of the US to Mexico
and into Canada.
Our horse slaughter
has more than doubled
in the last couple of years
because of what's
happened in the US
with horses.
And as the numbers
increase of these animals
being imported
into Canada, the number
of slaughter plants
increases.
We have
a slaughter plant that
recently opened in Ontario.
And one opened
in Saskatchewan (Canada)
and there's one
in Quebec (Canada).
So it's become
a big industry
to slaughter horses.
We have
a hundred-thousand horses
being shipped because
in the United States they
don’t do horse slaughter,
so they’re sending
all their horses
up to Canada
to slaughter them.
And they like to breed them,
so when they are big,
when they are heavy,
about to give birth,
they send them
up to slaughter.
So they’re slaughtering
not one but two.
They’re butchered and
then they’re shipped off
to France and Belgium
and China, Italy too.
Most grocery stores
in Quebec (Canada)
will sell horse meat.
In Valleyfield, Quebec,
they have a specialized
store just for horse meat.
Horses are transported
by truck from the US
to Canadian abattoirs,
and the exhausting trip,
covering
thousands of kilometers,
can take several days.
During this time,
the sick, injured
or elderly animals
usually get no food,
water, bedding or rest.
The trucks are not designed
for such large animals
and do not shield the horses
from inclement weather.
They're bringing them
into this country
on what's called
double-decker trucks.
And horses are very tall and
the facilities of the trucks
aren't tall enough.
They're driven from
Texas (USA)
up to Ontario (Canada)
and the entire trip
the animal has to be
leaned over because
they can't stand tall
in the vehicle.
Upon arriving
at the slaughterhouse,
the sensitive, intelligent
animals are prodded,
whipped or dragged
into the killing chambers.
Through a video
secretly filmed in 2010
by the Canadian
Horse Defense Coalition
at horse abattoirs
in Quebec and Alberta
the facilities’ sickening
and heartless practices
were brought
to the attention of
the Canadian government.
A Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation (CBC)
news report describes
a segment of the film
as follows:
“In one scene,
a horse writhes in agony
after it's shot in the face
with a .22 rifle, then
continues to squirm after
a second shot to the head.
It finally collapses
20 seconds later
when the slaughterer,
dressed in blue coveralls
and a baseball cap,
reloads and fires
a third round into its head.”
Captive bolt guns are
often used by abattoirs to
supposedly stun or render
animals unconscious so
they don’t feel pain during
the slaughtering process.
A steel bolt is fired into
the skull with the intent
to smash the brain.
These utterly crude
and barbaric devices
often fail to make
the animal unconscious
and thus the innocent one
intensely feels every cut
and slash of the blade
as they are horrifically
dismembered.
Usually it’s a bolt gun,
as they want them alive.
They don’t want them dead.
Sometimes
they will use rifles.
But the idea is
they don’t want them dead
because they want
their heart to pump.
If you have ever seen
a slaughterhouse,
they are not made
specifically for horses.
They are made
for shorter animals.
And they don’t
necessarily fit
a large animal like that.
So they move,
they don’t necessarily
hit them in the spot
(where) they’re supposed
to hit them in.
They may get them
in their eye,
they may get them
in their ear, lower;
and they have to hit them
sometimes
four or five times.
And then they’re still alive,
and then they hook them
by the feet upside down
and they slit their throat
because they want
their blood to pump faster.
They suffer a horrible,
horrible death.
It could be anywhere
from a half an hour
to an hour, as long as
it takes the blood to drain.
What are some of
the things we can do
to halt the murder
of our horse friends?
First, please never
purchase horse meat or
any products that involve
the suffering of horses.
Also, consider writing
to your local government
officials and remind them
that a civilized society
does not kill
and that horse abattoirs
must be closed.
Finally, following
an organic vegan diet
is the best example
we can all set, as it affirms
all life is sacred.
Many thanks
Coalition for the
Protection of Racehorses,
Canadian Coalition
for Farm Animals,
Refuge RR for Horses
and all the other
caring groups
working to stop the abuse
of the noble,
magnificent horse.
May their sincere efforts
help create a world
soon in coming where
animals and humans live
in love, peace, harmony
and mutual respect.
For more information
on protecting horses,
please visit
the following websites:
Coalition for the
Protection of Racehorses
HorseRacingKills.com
Canadian Coalition
for Farm Animals
www.HumaneFood.ca
Refuge RR for Horses
www.RefugeRR.org
Thoughtful viewers,
thank you for joining us
for today’s program.
Enlightening Entertainment
is up next after
Noteworthy News.
May all beings on Earth
live long and joyful lives.