From February 2020: Secret Decks May Have Capsized Livestock Ship that Drowned Thousands of Sheep
Following the tragic ship accident with over 14,000 live sheep on board, the Romanian government is taking the first appropriate actions.
In cooperation with local authorities and FOUR PAWS, ARCA was able to recover 254 of the 14,000 sheep involved in the accident. Over 70 of the rescued sheep have now died of their serious injuries.
The Queen Hind as it sinks with 14,000 sheep onboard
Some of the sheep who drowned...
Bucharest, 3 December 2019 Following the tragic ship accident with over
14,000 live sheep on board, the Romanian government is taking the first
appropriate actions. After a meeting with the animal welfare organisations
ARCA, partner of global animal welfare organisation FOUR PAWS, and Animals
International, the Romanian Minister of Agriculture Adrian Oros spoke out in
favour of suspending live exports to third countries. In the medium term,
frozen meat is to be exported instead. FOUR PAWS sees this decision as the
right step also for other EU countries.
This decision by Romania, one of the largest exporters in the EU, is an
important signal in terms of animal welfare. Other EU member states must
follow this example. Thousands of animals suffer every day from horrendous
transport conditions over extremely long distances. It is about time to, if
at all, export meat instead of animals ready for slaughter, says Dr Martina
Stephany, Director of the Farm Animals and Nutrition department at FOUR
PAWS. The announcement by the Romanian Minister of Agriculture followed
peaceful protests by local and international organisations such as FOUR
PAWS, ARCA, Animals International, Animal Society, Ethics and Future, FREE,
Nima Sanctuary, Romanian Vegan Association and Agent Green against live
animal exports in Bucharest on Monday 2nd December.
Additionally, FOUR PAWS calls on all EU member states to end all existing
agreements on the export of live animals to third countries and to introduce
a maximum transport time of eight hours. The European Commission is also
urgently called upon here to act quickly also regarding the complete
elucidation and consequences of this latest catastrophe, demands Stephany.
In cooperation with local authorities and FOUR PAWS, ARCA was able to
recover 254 of the 14,600 sheep involved in the accident. Over 70 of the
rescued sheep have now died of their serious injuries. Veterinarians from
the Romanian Veterinary Office are currently treating the remaining sheep on
a farm. Their future remains uncertain. FOUR PAWS keeps fighting for the
safe housing and protection of the animals.
With 12 million animals, Romania is the largest sheep and goat producer in
the EU after Great Britain and Spain. Yearly, around 2.4 million of these
animals get exported many of them to the Middle East, North Africa and the
Gulf region. Time and time again countless animals die in agony on these
transports.