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.
We can’t allow this
to happen.
And we have to say,
“No” as a nation.
It’s not only fighting
for our animals,
it’s fighting
for our humanity.
This is the
Stop Animal Cruelty
series on
Supreme Master
Television.
This week we’ll examine
the live export trade,
in which millions of
cows, sheep and goats
are transported overseas
by ship for slaughter.
In Australia,
this barbaric business
is huge with millions
of livestock sent to
the Middle East and
Southeast Asia each year.
More than six-million
live cattle have been
shipped to Indonesia
alone since the trade
began 20 years ago.
Australia exports a lot of
live animals for slaughter
in other countries.
There are around
four million sheep
each year go to
the Middle East and about
600,000 cattle
go to Southeast Asia
and to the Middle East
as well for slaughter.
Animals die,
certainly many sheep die
each year on the ships
because many of them
don’t recognize
the pellet food that
they are provided with.
It’s called inanition
but it means starvation
and salmonellosis,
that is an infection,
so they die on board.
Every year,
more than 500,000
innocent Australian cows
are jammed into ships
where they begin
the long voyage
to a violent death.
Along the way,
hundreds die from stress,
pain and fear and
others succumb to illness
prior to their arrival.
The cows who do survive
are subjected to
slaughtering methods that
are extremely gruesome
and beyond inhumane.
In March 2011, members
of the non-profit
animal-welfare group,
Animals Australia,
went to Indonesia
and filmed the killing of
bovines from Australia
in 11 randomly selected
abattoirs.
Their footage revealed
that cows were not
stunned before death.
Instead, the animals
were kicked, dragged
or pushed onto
the killing floor, brutally
flipped on their sides, and
then murdered by having
their throats slashed.
Lying in pools of their
own blood, they suffered
slow, agonizing deaths,
while fully conscious.
It’s worth noting that
in 2003, New Zealand
rightly, on moral
and economic grounds,
banned the (live export)
trade.
And why did they ban it?
The New Zealanders
were absolutely outraged
when they discovered
that their sheep were
being cruelly slaughtered
in Middle Eastern
countries.
They can hit rough seas.
They can hit really
humid weather,
hot weather, obviously
to the Middle East and
a lot of animals can die
as a result of pneumonia,
(or) salmonellosis.
It’s really bad.
There’s a lot of dust
in the air because of
the dry, pelletized food
and that can go
into the animal’s eyes
and animals can go blind
and they’re also standing
in their own feces
for the entire journey.
It’s a trip to hell.
It’s terrible.
In May 2011,
investigators from
Australian Broadcasting
Corporation’s (ABC’s)
Four Corners television
program also filmed the
utterly savage treatment
of cattle from Australia
in the Indonesian
slaughterhouses
previously visited
by Animals Australia.
Their footage,
which was aired during
a Four Corners program
on live exports, showed
many ghastly scenes,
including cows,
tied by one foot,
slipping and falling
on wet concrete and
repeatedly smashing
their heads.
One cow, lying helpless
on the floor,
was continuously kicked
and hit for no reason.
In several cases,
cows’ eyes were gouged
out or their tails broken
as workers forced them
into slaughter boxes.
What we saw
on Four Corners
was indicative of
what typically happens
when our cattle end up
in Indonesia.
They’re slowly,
systematically tortured
to death.
There’s no other way
of putting it.
That footage was
horrific: eye-gouging,
being kicked, hit.
Typically the tendons of
the legs are cut so that
when they are being
tortured to death, they
can’t actually move away
from their torturers.
It’s absolutely outrageous.
Dr. Bidda Jones,
chief scientist at
the Royal Society for
the Prevention of Cruelty
to Animals (RSPCA)
Australia who analyzed
the video taken stated,
“They basically hack
the heads off with
blunt knifes, causing
a lot of distress and pain."
ABC’s documentary also
revealed the sheer terror
of the animals
being murdered.
One cow, due to
a shortage of staff,
was forced to stand
on the killing floor
for several hours
before being slain.
The footage I will never
forget from the ABC
Four Corners program
was that footage towards
the end, of the black cow
trembling uncontrollably
as he watched other cows
being killed and
cut up in front of him.
And there was the
voiceover from the expert
saying that animals
like sheep and cows
do feel fear.
The Four Corners
documentary caused a
tremendous public outcry.
Millions of Australians
called on
the federal government to
ban the shipping of cattle
and other animals
overseas for slaughter.
The government
responded by imposing
a temporary ban on
live exports to Indonesia
at the beginning of
June 2011.
However after a month
the ban was lifted.
Dr. Patricia Petersen,
an independent politician
organized a
“National Day of Action
to End Live Export”
on June 18, 2011.
That day public rallies
were held countrywide,
with a gathering
in the city of Melbourne
attracting over 1,500
concerned citizens,
activists and
government officials.
We've got quite a few kids
here as well and that's
really lifted my spirits,
knowing that kids care
so much about animals
that they want to be
a part of this and
show their support.
They have made
some amazing placards.
And we're just getting
a lot of support from
the public as well
who are walking past,
and all the cars that are
beeping as they go past
and waving at us,
showing that they're
really on board with
what we're doing.
And I have been
inundated with
phone calls and emails
from the general public.
They contacted
Vegan Warriors,
wanting to know what
they can do to help.
A lot of these people
aren't vegan or vegetarian.
But it certainly opened
their eyes to the way that
animals are being
so inhumanely treated.
I'm here today
with my two daughters,
and we're supporting
a voice for the animals
that get exported
from our country to
other countries, and
that are cruelly treated
and tortured
behind closed doors.
And we want it to be
recognized and we want
this atrocity to stop.
It's made me start to
want to go back to
being a vegetarian
and not eat meat.
I was raised
a vegetarian, actually.
I ate meat
for a little while,
but not since I saw that
Four Corners program.
And I don’t think
I’ll ever eat meat again.
I’ll go back to
being vegetarian.
A 2010 poll
commissioned by
the World Society for
the Protection of Animals
shows that
an overwhelming 79% of
Australians want to see
the live animal trade
ended.
The trade in live animals
is inherently,
fundamentally wrong.
It’s cruel,
and it’s got to stop.
There’s no middle ground
with this issue.
It just needs to be banned
outright.
It needs to go down
in the history books
with the end of slavery.
The end of live exports
in this country
just has to happen.
We need to stop
all live export to other
countries altogether.
I've been contacted by
so many people who have
never ever had anything
to do with animal rights.
They want to make
their voices heard, and
they are asking me what
they can do to help.
They just wanted me
to know that
they're supportive.
And they've sent e-mails
to the government to
let them know that
they're not going to
tolerate the way that
we're treating animals.
We want total phasing
out of the industry.
We know that there’s
no moral argument,
or economic argument
or even environmental
argument that can be
put forward to support
the continuation of
the live export trade.
Not only is
the live export trade
brutally cruel to livestock,
it also has a grave impact
on Australia’s
delicate ecosystem.
There’s no excuse
for the devastation that
this is causing to
our ecological system
in the Northern Territory
and in Western Australia.
The Australian
Conservation Association
is extremely concerned
about the environmental
impacts of live export,
and they’re concerned
about the extent to which
cattle are bred
in the Northern Territory,
and what that’s doing to
our country, the northern
part of Australia.
So in terms of
environmental impacts,
they are serious.
They’re far-reaching.
And one could argue that
for environmental reasons
alone this trade should
be brought to a halt.
There are a number of
researchers who are
actively investigating
the negative
environmental impacts
of live exports,
how unnecessary
the trade is and why,
for solid environmental
reasons,
it needs to be outlawed.
How can we end
live animal exports and
shut down the heartless
livestock industry
forever?
In the end, there is
only one solution:
the widespread adoption
of a plant-based diet.
All types of slaughter,
whether here
or in Indonesia,
are inhumane.
I think we’re going to
have to look
very seriously at our diets.
We’re going to have to
look at our natural
resources such as water,
and we are going to
have to make some
very tough and serious
decisions about what
we eat and why we eat it.
And ultimately, I do think
that a move towards
veganism is warranted.
The suffering of
these animals doesn’t
just happen overseas
but right here
in our own front yard.
And it’s clear that
all animals suffer
in abattoirs, and that
the best solution is
a plant-based, vegan diet.
We join concerned
Australian citizens,
animal advocacy groups
and government officials
in calling for
an immediate end to
the horrendous practice
of transporting and
murdering cows, sheep,
and goats in unavoidably
torturous conditions.
We pray that
governments everywhere
will quickly enact laws
that protect the sanctity
of all animal life and
communities
across the globe soon
embrace the nourishing
and life-affirming
organic vegan diet.
For more information
on banning
the live animal trade in
Australia, please visit
the following websites:
Animals Australia
www.AnimalsAustralia.org
Barristers Animal
Welfare Panel
www.BAWP.org.au
StopLiveExports.org
www.StopLiveExports.org
Thank you
for your presence today
on our program.
May all beings on Earth
forever lead long,
peaceful and safe lives
under Heaven’s protection.