Wild animal circuses BANNED in England!
An Animal Rights Article from All-Creatures.org
The British Parliament has FINALLY banned the use of
wild animals in travelling circuses in England!
Celebrate the good news with Animal Defenders International – the British
Parliament has FINALLY banned the use of wild animals in travelling circuses
in England!
The Wild Animals in Circuses (No. 2) Bill passed its Third, and final,
Reading today (23 July) in the House of Lords. Proceeding to Royal Assent,
and coming into effect in January 2020, the legislation comes after more
than a decade of promises from successive governments and over 20 years of
investigations and campaigns by ADI.
Similar legislation is already in place in Scotland, with a bill to ban wild
animal acts introduced earlier this month to the Welsh Assembly. If you live
in Wales, please ask your AM to support!
ADI has offered to assist with relocation of animals affected by the law.
Please help us expose and stop circus suffering.
How the once powerful British circus industry fell
25 years ago, the UK had one of the most powerful circus industries in the
world, supplying thousands of animals to circuses worldwide. But as ADI
hidden cameras captured what was going on behind the scenes, the public
turned its back on this cruel multi-million-pound industry and the law has
finally caught up.
Key events in the battle to stop circus suffering in Britain:
- 1993: ADI secures the first film of the appalling conditions inside
circus permanent training quarters and also captures on film a llama
being beaten.
- 1996: 7.3 million viewers tune into BBC’s ‘Here & Now’ featuring an
ADI investigation of Europe’s largest supplier of lions and tigers for
circuses – Chipperfield Enterprises in Oxfordshire.
- 1998: ADI releases the findings of a two-year undercover
investigation of the British and European circus industry. The harrowing
footage shows animals living in horrendous conditions and enduring
sustained abuse and beatings. Numerous circuses close and the number of
British circuses with animals halve within six months. Steve Gills, the
elephant keeper at Mary Chipperfield Promotions, is jailed as a result
of the ADI footage of him repeatedly beating the elephants.
- 1999: Mary Chipperfield (“Queen of the British circus”) is convicted
on multiple counts of cruelty after being filmed by ADI thrashing and
kicking an infant chimpanzee called Trudy. Chipperfield’s husband, a zoo
inspector, Roger Cawley is convicted of cruelty to a young elephant
called Flora.
- 2002: ADI unsuccessfully tries to have Anne the elephant removed
from Bobby Roberts Circus. She is almost skeletal after the death of her
two companion elephants.
- 2003: Chipperfield Enterprises, which boasted supplying over 2,000
lions and tigers to circuses, closes down. Mary Chipperfield Promotions
had also closed.
- 2006: An amendment to the Animal Welfare Act that would ban the use
of wild animals in circuses is withdrawn after promises in both the
Commons and Lords that the Act will be used to ban animal acts.
- 2007: Perhaps the most shameful episode in political history
relating to animals – the Circus Working Group report. The gathering of
evidence is so manipulated as to exclude almost all evidence. The report
is inconclusive and contradictory and used to condemn animals to years
of more beatings.
- 2009: ADI cameras inside an elephant tent record the repeated abuse
of three elephants with the Great British Circus.
- 2010: 94.5% of respondents to Defra’s public consultation support a
wild animal ban. A ban is again promised.
- 2011: ADI exposes the terrible abuse of Anne the elephant at Bobby
Roberts Super Circus, during which the elderly elephant is kicked and
beaten whilst chained in a barn. Backbench MPs debate the issue and vote
unanimously to instruct the Government to pass a ban.
- 2012: Circus owner Bobby Roberts is convicted of cruelty as a result
of ADI footage. The coalition government announces a ban and drafts
legislation the following year. It simply gathers dust. Since then, more
than half of the forty-five bans in place worldwide have passed.
Multiple attempts to bring in a private member’s bill using the
government’s own text are repeatedly blocked over the years.
- 2016: ADI exposes how Thomas Chipperfield’s big cats live and also
inside Peter Jolly’s Circus.
- 2017: Scotland bans wild animals in circuses (Ireland also passes a
ban the same year).
- 2019: Parliament finally passes legislation to ban wild animals in
circuses
UK opinion polls and consultations have consistently shown overwhelming
public opposition to the use of wild animals in circuses. A ban has also
been supported by animal experts, with a report commissioned by the Welsh
Government finding that “Life for wild animals in travelling circuses...does
not appear to constitute either a ‘good life’ or a ‘life worth living’”.
Given the constant travel and their temporary nature, circuses cannot
provide animals with adequate facilities to keep them physically or
psychologically healthy. Welfare is always compromised. There have also been
repeated exposés by ADI of physical abuse behind the scenes in circuses.
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