France Bans the Farming of Wild Animals For Their Fur
Clothing/Cosmetics Abuses Articles from All-Creatures.org

FROM FurFreeAlliance.com
November 2021

In an historic move, the French senate voted by an overwhelming majority in favour of legislation to end the farming of wild animals for their fur. The ban will go into immediate effect and will see the two remaining French mink fur farms shut down.

caged Raccoon

In a historic move, today the French senate voted by an overwhelming majority in favour of legislation to end the farming of wild animals for their fur. The ban will go into immediate effect and will see the two remaining French mink fur farms shut down.

With 332 votes in favor and only 1 against, the senate showed immense support to make fur production history. Muriel Arnal from One Voice says:

“There are only two mink farms left in France. But, as we requested, this ban has been expanded to all wild animals being bred for their fur. We welcome this important step forward and hope that it will inspire the countries that have not yet taken the decision to ban the exploitation of foxes, minks, chinchillas… Global society is calling for this progress. It is time.”

A number of recent investigations by our French member organisation One Voice laid bare the cruel conditions under which animals were kept on French fur farms. The undercover footage, recorded in 2017, 2019 and in 2020, revealed shocking examples of animal suffering, including mink with physical injuries kept in appalling conditions and displaying stereotypical behaviour. Some of them had injured eyes, missing teeth, missing tails, paralysed and necrotic legs, and skin diseases.

wild Mink

Following ongoing public opposition, last year the French government announced a proposal to prohibit mink fur production with a phase-out period of 5 years. Together with One Voice, the Fur Free Alliance urged the French government to take immediate action and shut down France’s last remaining fur farms. Today’s decision that a ban will take immediate effect, and will cover the farming of wild animals for their fur, is celebrated by NGOs around the world and will serve as an example for other countries to follow.

Joh Vinding, chairman of the Fur Free Alliance:

“There has never been a more urgent need to end the practice of fur farming worldwide, an industry that not only treats animals inhumanely for a product no-one needs, but has also been shown to be a breeding ground for outbreaks of infectious diseases such as Covid-19.”

In the past five years alone, animal welfare concerns have led 8 countries to adopt legislation to end the animal cruelty on fur farms. Discussions on the prohibition of fur farming are currently being considered in Latvia, Lithuania, Spain, Ukraine and Bulgaria.


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