Friday 5 February 2010

Answers needed in Ireland?





Horses found starved to Death on Golf course

Irish Economic Downturn Impacts on Animals

ISPCA Reports Unprecedented Numbers of Calls About Horses

Smithfield Horse Market

Dead TBs discovered in Co Armagh

Abandoned and Dying Horses

CROSSKENNAN LANE Press release

CROSSKENNAN LANE Video

Lots of links, lots of shocking stories.

Dead horses, abandoned horses, neglected horses - we all have an image in our head of the animal abuser, but it isn’t always a shady man in a flat cap, waving a stick or counting his money while his creatures starve.

Ignorance, poverty, illness and old age are also factors in neglect, abandonment and death of horses and livestock in modern Ireland.
The boom time is over, the bust is here and some inexperienced and even experienced horsemen and women bit off more than they can chew and are running out of money and options.

It is fact that sales rings and markets are seeing every increasing numbers of horses being left behind when they do not sell.
Sanctuaries are overwhelmed and only a small number of specialist centres have the knowledge and resources to help.
And when dogs and cats are being kicked to the kerb in the financial crisis, large, expensive animals like horses are going to suffer even more.

Still in Ireland, there is a culture which sees men and women, often alone, farming and keeping animals into their twilight years, often without assistance from family members.
Add conditions like dementia into the mix and you have a ticking time bomb of elderly landowners without the money and resources to cope with a large number of animals.
Sons, daughters and well meaning friends and neighbours are often driven away through pride or paranoia – “they’re after my land, my house!” - while animals go without food and water and buildings crumble.

In Northern Ireland, DARD – the Department of Agriculture and Regional Development, are compelled to carry out farm visits at least once a year. Veterinary inspectors are expected to check fields, sheds and the livestock themselves.
Certain clusters of animal cruelty and neglect cases have flagged up concern – piles of dead and emaciated animals do not appear overnight – who is looking out for them?
Indeed, who is looking out for these older landowners and who has the teeth to be able to take them aside and offer to reduce herd numbers or relieve them from responsibility altogether?

All too often it is the USPCA – the Ulster Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, who are in the headlines, going into these farms and smallholdings, exposing what has been going on and ‘saving the day’ – when essentially the organisation has very little power to do anything at all.
Convictions concerning large animals are few and far between and when horses and cattle are dead, they are dead.
This blogger had occasion to call upon that organisation over an emaciated stallion, but as the horse had water and was in a field with grass, no action was ever forthcoming and this older man – who is not approachable at the best of times - continues to buy and sell horses in shocking conditions.
When we can’t even assist our elderly and the struggling, how can we assist their animals?
Who is going to take the lead on educating people on how to properly look after their horses?

2 Comments:

Blogger EMWelaine said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

6 February 2010 at 11:10  
Blogger EMWelaine said...

I've amended my first reply as I wanted to give it more thought.
The situation in Ireland is not good and it's happening here in the UK too. Too many horses are bred and for teh sake of the animals it's got to stop. The welfare laws need to be stepped up and used and those who inflict abuse and cruelty face huge penalties. For those who are in trouble (elderly etc) then the onus has to be on an efficient and more active monitoring scheme. One that invovles field officers from all shelters and rescues coming together for the sake of the animals. too much inter-rescue competing goes on with all seeking funding from the same diminishing pot of donation money on offer but reality is that unless we all band together then animals will continue to suffer and die in awful places. We are supposed to be nations of animal lovers and horse breeders but when terrible atrocities occur as reported on this blog how can we call ourselves anything other than blindfolded!
You can contact this charity via
www.equinemarketwatch.org.uk
I have posted the link to this blog on twitter today and added it to our own blog
With respect to all of you who care and using our own motto
"We will NOT look away"
Lets stand up and work together to end this awfulness that is happening under our very noses.

6 February 2010 at 11:35  

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