New animal welfare legislation in the UK is expected to strengthen the welfare rights of crustaceans and molluscs, banning lobsters and crabs from being boiled alive.
Fur and live crabs and lobsters will no longer be allowed to be sold at markets in the Dutch capital from 2022. Amsterdam city council has decided to ban the sale on animal rights grounds, a pledge that was part of the current city coalition agreement.
‘Amsterdam has 34 markets, the most in the country,’ said economic
affairs chief Victor Everhardt, a D66 liberal democrat, in a press
release. ‘In the interests of animal welfare, there will be a ban on
the sale of fur and live crabs and lobsters, and it will be actively
enforced.’
The city is not the first to take more action in the interest of
animal rights. Earlier in 2021, Israel became the world’s first
country to ban the sale of fur to the fashion industry, as part of a
wildlife protection law.
New animal welfare legislation in the UK is expected to strengthen
the welfare rights of crustaceans and molluscs, banning lobsters and
crabs from being boiled alive.