Horse meat is more common than you’d think...
Image Jez Timms - Unsplash
Horse meat is not really a thing in Canada. There is some demand for it in
certain parts of the French-speaking province of Quebec, but generally
speaking, we don’t eat horses here. Yet, unbeknownst to most people, Canada
is one of the biggest suppliers of horse meat in the world, mainly to Asia
and parts of the EU, and one of the only nations that still permits horse
slaughter.
The Canadian horse meat industry is worth tens of millions of dollars,
fuelled by breeders and traders raising horses for meat, as well as
importing them from auctions in the U.S. and Canada. It’s an industry—like
the rest of animal agriculture—that thrives in secrecy, and one that
advocates are working tirelessly to shut down.
In the U.S., horse slaughter was essentially outlawed in 2006, when Congress
passed the Horse Slaughter Prevention Act. But that hasn’t shut down the
U.S. horse meat trade entirely. In the province of Alberta, and just south
of the border in Montana, sprawling feedlots house thousands of draft and
draft-cross horses, former racehorses, former carriage horses, and even
former pets, some still with braided forelocks. Most will be slaughtered in
Canada for meat. Some will be exported live to Japan on grueling, long-haul
flights to be slaughtered for horse sashimi.
“Because they are going for meat, they don’t generally get veterinary care,
no hoof care,” explains executive director of Canadian Horse Defence
Coalition (CHDC), Sinikka Crosland. Photos provided to Sentient Media by
CHDC show filthy horses on crowded feedlots. One Belgian mare appears to be
suffering from an eye infection, and many others look like they have hoof
conditions.
Horses on Canadian feedlots also have the northern climate to cope with. In
2019, animal advocacy groups Animals’ Angels and Tierschutzbund Zuerich
investigated a large feedlot in Alberta with a capacity of 10,000 horses.
According to the organization’s website, “Previous Animals’ Angels
investigations of the Prime facilities in 2016 and 2013 uncovered horrific
conditions, including a lack of shelter from winter weather, escaped horses,
and mares dying while giving birth without any medical intervention.”
Three years later, investigators found conditions at the feedlot had not
improved. Horses still had no shelter during frigid winter conditions.
According to the investigators, “animals’ backs were covered in snow and
frost, and the ground—coated in manure—was also frozen, posing high risk of
injury.” One investigator noted that “many of the Prime Feedlot horses
appeared lethargic and unwell,” and “many horses were struggling with
overgrown and cracked hooves, and several animals were coughing and sneezing
in the freezing temperatures.”
In Canada, there are no laws governing the treatment of animals in farms.
Standard farming practices are typically exempt from provincial animal care
acts. The National Farm Animal Care Council (NFACC) does set out provisions
for the care of horses on feedlots. They are voluntary, industry-backed
guidelines—not laws. As a result, horses bound for slaughter are widely
neglected.
CHDC has long focused its efforts on one of the most perilous legs of the
journey—live transport to Japan. Last year, the group took the Canadian Food
Inspection Agency (CFIA) to federal court over violations of animal welfare
regulations witnessed prior to a 28-hour flight. The horses were crammed too
many to a crate without adequate headroom. The group’s initial petition was
not successful though, and in January, they filed for an appeal.
As they now await their next day in court, the coalition and their lawyer,
Rebecca Breder, are gathering more ammo. Through a recent public records
request, the CHDC received CFIA reports that, in May 2019, five horses on a
Korean Air flight from Canada to Japan were found no longer standing in
their crates upon arrival. Four others “did not show physical strength,
although they stood up for unloading,” and one horse was dead.
“The government just doesn’t care enough,” says Breder, “and the government
isn’t in any hurry [to end or further regulate the horsemeat industry]
because there are a lot of big business interests at stake; money.” And, she
adds, “people just don’t know what’s going on.”
“The industry knows that people have a love affair with horses,” says
Crosland, so keeping Canada’s horsemeat trade out of the public eye has been
crucial to its success. But that is changing.
Since the first court case, coverage of Canada’s horsemeat trade has
increased across mainstream and social media. And advocates aren’t stopping
there. Breder and the CHDC will be heading back to court, likely in 2021.
They hope that by utilizing the law and focusing on transport, they can shed
more light on the horsemeat trade in Canada, and that horse lovers across
the country will join in the fight.
Number of animals killed in the world by the fishing, meat, dairy and egg industries, since you opened this webpage.
0 marine animals
0 chickens
0 ducks
0 pigs
0 rabbits
0 turkeys
0 geese
0 sheep
0 goats
0 cows / calves
0 rodents
0 pigeons/other birds
0 buffaloes
0 dogs
0 cats
0 horses
0 donkeys and mules
0 camels / camelids