PETA INDIA RE-LAUNCHES INTERNATIONAL CAMPAIGN TO BOYCOTT INDIAN LEATHER Group Blames Government, Council for Leather Exports for Unlawful Cruelty to Animals
Released on = July 3, 2006, 12:42 am
Press Release Author = People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
Industry = Apparel & Fashion
Press Release Summary = Today, PETA India and its worldwide affiliates are re-launching a campaign to encourage retailers and consumers worldwide to boycott Indian leather. This decision comes after a total lack of enforcement of the animal welfare standards which were promised by the former Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and late Minister of Commerce Murasoli Maran, a refusal by the Council for Leather Exports (CLE) to stop its members from supporting illegal slaughterhouses and CLE's failure to take sincere and significant action to alleviate the suffering of animals used for leather. Today, PETA India will hold its first series of demonstrations outside the Delhi International Leather Fair.
Press Release Body = For Immediate Release:
Contact:
N.G. Jayasimha (0) 98201 22602
PETA INDIA RE-LAUNCHES INTERNATIONAL CAMPAIGN TO BOYCOTT INDIAN LEATHER
Group Blames Government, Council for Leather Exports for Unlawful Cruelty to Animals
Chennai - Today, PETA India and its worldwide affiliates are re-launching a campaign to encourage retailers and consumers worldwide to boycott Indian leather. This decision comes after a total lack of enforcement of the animal welfare standards which were promised by the former Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and late Minister of Commerce Murasoli Maran, a refusal by the Council for Leather Exports (CLE) to stop its members from supporting illegal slaughterhouses and CLE's failure to take sincere and significant action to alleviate the suffering of animals used for leather. Today, PETA India will hold its first series of demonstrations outside the Delhi International Leather Fair.
PETA India investigations spanning seven years reveal that Indian animals used for leather are transported in such poor, crowded conditions that their bones break, and they often suffocate or die en route to slaughter. The animals are routinely dragged, beaten and otherwise cruelly and illegally mishandled. At all municipal slaughterhouses, animals are slaughtered in full view of each other, which is illegal. Although it claims to have an Animal Welfare Reform Programme, the CLE refuses to initiate any action to prevent leather businesses from obtaining hides and skins - even from unlicensed, illegal slaughterhouses.
The CLE's Animal Welfare Reform Programme lacks the vigour and follow-through which would be required in order for concrete and long-lasting improvements to be made in animals' lives. PETA India and its affiliates put CLE's promises to alleviate cruelty to animals to the test by offering a draft memorandum of understanding (MOU) which spelled out specific actions which could be taken to reduce the suffering of animals used in the leather trade. After sitting on the MOU for nine months, the CLE ultimately refused even to negotiate with PETA.
In a letter to M M Hashim, chair of the CLE's Core Committee on Animal Welfare Reform Programme, PETA Europe Director Poorva Joshipura points out that the CLE's modus operandi is to try to keep the PETA campaign at bay while Indian leather exporters continue to profit from the illegal abuse of animals without making real improvements for animals.
"The Indian government has done nothing to stop the illegal abuse of animals in the leather trade, and the CLE's programme is a sham", says PETA India Coordinator of Campaigns & Legal Affairs N.G. Jayasimha. "We will stop this campaign only if we receive a suitable response to our draft MOU and a plan from the CLE which we can trust will be followed and which will have a real and positive impact on the lives of suffering animals."
When PETA initially launched its campaign in 2000, about 40 major retailers around the world began boycotting Indian leather. An estimated $68 million was reportedly lost by the Indian leather industry as a result of these companies' decisions not to support unlawful cruelty. The campaign also gained the support of celebrities all over the world, including His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Sir Paul McCartney, Pamela Anderson, Jackie Chan and others.
Web Site = http://www.petaindia.org
Contact Details = Jayasimha N.G Coordinator-Campaigns & Legal Affairs | People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) India