PETA People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals
August 2018
The eyewitness saw cruelty in every one of the 25 English farming sheds visited by two shearing contractors... Sheep are a flocking species and it is known that they suffer by seeing other sheep suffer.

Workers Stood on the Necks of Panicked Sheep
The eyewitness saw cruelty in every one of the 25 English farming sheds
visited by two shearing contractors. When the sheep panicked while they were
being pinned down, the shearers stamped and stood on their heads and necks,
squeezed their throats, and kicked them in the stomach. They threw the
defenceless and fearful animals around, twisted their necks and limbs, and
slammed their heads and bodies into the hard wooden floors.
Shearers also violently punched these gentle animals in the face and beat
and jabbed them in the head with clippers.
Clive Phillips, Professor of Animal Welfare at the University of Queensland,
says:
“Throwing sheep from a significant height … when they are in a state of extreme distress is likely to result in injury to the sheep, broken limbs, neck etc. … Such an experience undoubtedly constitutes suffering on the part of the sheep. [These actions were] deliberately inflicted and lasted for more than just a short period of time.”
Gaping Wounds Sewed up Without Pain Relief
Workers didn’t give sheep any pain relief before piercing their flesh
with a needle – which the eyewitness never saw being sterilised – and trying
to sew up gaping, bloody wounds caused by rough shearing. Some animals were
suffering from reported mastitis – a painful infection of the udder –
prolapsed uteruses, and bloody hooves. The eyewitness never saw injured or
sick sheep receive any veterinary care.
According to Donald Maurice Broom, Professor of Veterinary Medicine at the
University of Cambridge, sewing up a cut without any anaesthesia and
throwing sheep cause pain and suffering to the animals to a degree that is
contrary to the recommendations for legal practice by the World Organisation
for Animal Health, and other international bodies. These actions are illegal
in most countries.

Sheep Left to Die
A farmer dragged two sheep who were unable to walk into a shed and left
them without veterinary care. They eventually died. Several more died of a
condition that a farmer called a “heart attack” during shearing.
Professor of Neuroscience and Animal Behaviour, Lesley Rogers, at the
University of New England, says,
“Sheep are a flocking species and it is known that they suffer by seeing
other sheep suffer. It is very inhumane practice to simply let suffering
sheep die without assistance.”
This Is Standard in the Wool Industry
PETA has already exposed rampant cruelty in shearing sheds across Australia and South America. The best thing that you can do for sheep is refuse to buy wool. It’s easy to check labels before you buy clothing and other items. If a tag says “wool”, leave the item on the shelf and look for a cruelty-free alternative. That’s all you have to do.