Group seeks beagle research moratorium
28 August 2007
Group seeks beagle research moratorium Petition to ban dog and cat experiments launched
An immediate moratorium on beagle research is being sought by New Zealand’s second largest animal advocacy organisation SAFE, following last night’s exposé by current affairs programme 60 Minutes.
SAFE has
launched an online petition calling for New Zealand to
prohibit of the use of dogs and cats in experiments. The
petition (www.banbeagleexperiments.org.nz
SAFE’s four-month investigation into Valley Animal
Research Centre (VARC), the breeding and research facility
mentioned in the 60 Minutes programme, reveals beagles
living in appalling conditions. “The conditions in
which these animals are housed are poor and who knows what
terrible fate awaits them,” says SAFE campaign director
Hans Kriek. ”Beagles are the vivisectors’
choice of dog because they are gentle and easy to handle.
What a way to repay these trusting animals. Anyone who has
ever had a dog as a companion will be able to relate to the
terrible suffering of these animals,” says Mr Kriek. SAFE’s online petition allows New Zealanders to
support calls for laboratory dogs and cats to be given the
same legal protection as those kept as companion animals.
The petition also seeks to prevent duplicate and superfluous
experiments currently being approved by ethics
committees.
Undercover footage of the beagles is
available on request. Beagle research in
New Zealand Background information The company at
the centre of last night’s program is Valley Animal
Research Centre (VARC). A four-month SAFE
investigation reveals that VARC’s facilities are holding
close to 200 beagles in very basic, barren kennels. SAFE understands VARC also breeds or intends to breed
other companion animals for research, including cats, horses
and rabbits. VARC has been quietly expanding its
operations and now has extensive facilities in the Hawke’s
Bay and Manawatu regions. VARC is one of the
largest suppliers of companion animals for laboratory
testing in the Southern Hemisphere. VARC is headed
by Canadian toxicologist Alan Goldenthal, a former director
of Pasteur Merioux’s Animal Resources and Pathology Centre
in Canada and research director of Massey University-owned
Estendart Limited in Palmerston North. VARC is a
contract facility that provides animal experimentation
services to national and international clients. SAFE believes animal experimentation is cruel and a
waste of valuable research money that should be used for
more reliable, non-animal based research. By Goldenthal’s
own admission, only 0.1 per cent of products that are
pre-clinically tested on animals reach the market. Goldenthal also admits to knowing research conducted in
New Zealand involving animals is redundant, complementary or
sequential to studies being performed elsewhere. As a
contracted service provider, he believes he cannot make
comments to other researchers nor to the client
commissioning the research. SAFE believes
Goldenthal’s comments are a damning indictment of the
ineffectiveness of New Zealand’s animal ethics committees,
who are charged with preventing duplicate research. SAFE
has had difficulty determining precisely what type of
experimentation the beagles will endure but understands that
male contraception drug tests are being carried out on a
number of dogs. SAFE is calling on Jim Anderton, the
Minister responsible for administering the Animal Welfare
Act, to launch an inquiry into the National Animal Ethics
Advisory Committee’s failure to prevent the unnecessary
use of animals in experiments and to see a ban on the use of
cats and dogs as research animals. More information:
visit: (www.banbeagleexperiments.org.nz
ENDS
Visit
www.banbeagleexperiments.org.nz