(Chatham County, GA) John Crosby’s 64-year-old neighbor says she’d do it all over again. Previously facing theft and trespass charges for entering Crosby’s property in October 2009 and unchaining his dog, Ann Wylene Lam had reportedly informed local authorities of the alleged neglect months earlier. Speaking with reporters in early December, she described her impression of the dog on the day she rescued him: “He’s not eating, he won’t pick his head up out of his bowl, he’s giving up, he’s just quitting.”
John Crosby expressed in a December 2009 news interview that he could not afford to take the dog to a veterinarian, and was unaware of the local prohibition against tethering. The dog was given over to Savannah/Chatham County Animal Control by Ms. Lam, but ultimately did not survive. John Crosby has been charged with tethering and animal neglect.
Neighbor disputes over animal care are all-too-common and the solutions are rarely expedient. When an animal’s life appears to be in immediate danger (due, for example, to temperature extremes and exposure or starvation), calling 911 is appropriate. Complaints to local law enforcement authorities should always be made via a formal written report, and keeping a dated journal of developments is often useful for witnesses. Here are some guidelines for addressing chronic animal neglect in your neighborhood:
The federal government plans to step up its efforts to fight opposition to the Canadian seal hunt by countering the online campaigns created by anti-sealing groups to correct what it says is misinformation about seal hunt
There are 4 links to petitions/emails in my comment. (please add the links I missed).
International Animal Rights Day (IARD) - 10th December - aims to remember the animal victims of human tyranny and call for the recognition of our Universal Declaration of Animal Rights (UDAR) Sign the declaration.
We don't want people dying of AIDS and we don't want primates being tortured any more !!! Please take action: USA needs the Great Ape Protection Act. contact your legislator and ask them to support the H.R. 1326
Updates: » If your legislator is not signed on, ask them to cosponsor the Great Ape Protection Act (H.R. 1326.) » If they are a 2009 cosponsor, please thank them. » To order legislator postcards, click here. » To find your legislator, click here. » Finally, email the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Let them know you no longer want your tax dollars going towards research on great apes. Tell them you want NIH:
To retire all government owned/supported chimpanzees currently in U.S. labs to sanctuary; and, To reallocate funding for alternatives, which are more humane, safer and better science.
"I have lost friends, teachers, and colleagues to this disease. Today I watch with those who are waiting for a cure. In loving recognition, I ask that we move towards humane and scientifically superior research that will give all of us the promise of an end to HIV/AIDS." - Karen S., NEAVS staff
NEAVS/Project R&R continues to advocate for better science. In honor of World AIDS Day, a day of international awareness about HIV and AIDS, we are asking our supporters to reach out to their Representatives in support of the Great Ape Protection Act (H.R.1326), a bill to end chimpanzee research.
Why today?
The use of chimpanzees was once hailed as “the key” to a cure for AIDS. Yet AIDS continues to kill millions worldwide, in spite of the large number of chimpanzees bred and historically used in HIV/AIDS research.
Today, HIV research using chimpanzees represents an extremely small, nearly non-existent percent of all HIV research – an admission by scientists that the chimpanzee model of AIDS/HIV is a failure. Still, a few studies backed by federal funding continue.
Please contact your legislator and ask them to support the Great Ape Protection Act (H.R. 1326) by signing on as a cosponsor. If they have already signed on as a cosponsor, please thank them.
Despite the failure of chimpanzee use to prevent or cure HIV/AIDS, some researchers are calling for a return of their use to study the disease. “An Assessment of the Role of Chimpanzees in AIDS Vaccine Research,” published in 2008 and authored by Project R&R’s Science Director and geneticist Jarrod Bailey, Ph.D., investigated chimpanzees use in HIV/AIDS vaccine development. This paper demonstrated that a return to chimpanzee use would be not only non-productive, but even counterproductive to scientific progress in preventing and conquering AIDS. Touched by HIV/AIDS: the story of one HIV research survivor
Purchased from a circus at age 7, Yoko was sent to the Laboratory for Experimental Medicine and Surgery in Primates in 1981. He was used extensively in research and infected with both HIV and hepatitis C – today he tests negative for both. Why? Although HIV can replicate in their bodies, chimpanzees infected with HIV do not become sick with symptoms of AIDS.
Now in sanctuary at Fauna, Yoko has become very social and can often be found in a grooming circle of friends. A fast runner who loves to play chase, he is a very small adult male, but what he lacks in size he makes up for in personality.
The Freedom of Information Act 2000 (FOIA) sets out the ways the public can get access to information held by the Government. This includes information held by the Home Office, Universities and other bodies about animal experimentation.
There are a number of exemptions for the FOIA including one that says if another law bans information from being given out, then the FOIA doesn’t apply to that.
Unfortunately, this applies to animal experiments. Because Section 24 of the Animal (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 stops the Home Office giving out information about experiment licences which researchers want to keep secret, we can’t use the FOIA to get this information.
The BUAV doesn’t think this is fair. We don’t want to know researchers names or addresses or anything that is genuinely confidential. However, we do think the public has a right to know what is being done to animals in experiments and why.
Call for an international day of action for the release of animal rights activists imprisoned in the Netherlands - Wednesday, 02
Since 29 October 2009 Rieke S., an activist from Germany accused of releasing mink from a mink farm in Gelderse/Barchem, is imprisoned on remand in Breda, Netherlands. On November 17th, 2009, another activist, this time from the Netherlands, was arrested and imprisoned on remand. According to the media, 5000 mink were released and several cages destroyed in the course of the liberation they are accused of. Unfortunately, the minks couldn't escape from the area, seemingly because the police interrupted the action before the fences could be opened and removed. The first accused activist was allegedly arrested already during the liberation action, supposedly as a direct result of over two years of continous observation and surveillance of the Dutch animal rights movement. Three apartments were raided by the police. The pre-trial detention was already prolonged several times in both cases, therefore a soon release seems unlikely. The imprisoned activists are isolated from the outside world, so far they weren´t allowed to receive visits from their friends or relatives. Even the receiving of letters was averted for the first weeks. This violates EU-directives: According to the European Court for Human Rights pre-trial detention in EU-countries is only allowed to be imposed for securing a criminal case, and mustn't be of punitive character because the trial itself has not yet been completed. Contact to the family must be allowed, the amount of postal letters may not be limited or stopped totally. The German Animal Rights group "die tierbefreier e.V." and other animal rights groups are therefore calling for an international day of action on December 2nd, to demand the immediate release of both activists and to end their isolation. The activists must be able to receive visits and mail at regular intervals! To create maximum pressure on the Dutch authorities, protests at Dutch embassies and consulates should take place on this day (but are of course also welcome before or afterwards!).
It is also possible to express one's protest by contacting the Dutch representatives by phone, fax or e-mail. Please inform us beforehand at holland@die-tierbefreier.d
e whether you can organise a demo so that we know it for a press release. Reports and/or photographs to this mailaddress are also appreciated. Please also continue to write supportive letters for both prisoners. For Rieke it is best to use the above mail address for the dutch activist you can use dbf-sg@riseup.net . The e-mails are printed out and forwarded to the prison. Furthermore, to pay for lawyers etc money is needed urgently. Please organise benefits and donate the money to the following bank account: International:To: RA LoukidisIBAN: DE40 1408 0000 0255 1809 01 BIC: DRES DE FF 140Subject: Holland For donations from inside Germany:Inhaber: RA LoukidisKto.-Nr.: 0255180901BLZ: 14080000Dresdner BankStichwort: Holland
ENFIELD is the first council in the country to use only "cruelty-free" cleaning products.
The British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV), which campaigns to end animal experiments, voiced delight at the decision, made at last night's council meeting.
Councillor Christopher Cole introduced the motion in support of the BUAV's "Clean Up Cruelty" campaign, which seeks to end cruel animal testing for household products and their ingredients.
Enfield is now the first council in the UK whose cleaning contractors can only use BUAV-approved products.
BUAV chief executive Michelle Thew said: “The BUAV congratulates Enfield Council and its residents in taking this important stance.
"We urge other councils throughout the UK to adopt a similar position, and support our campaign to end the cruelty and suffering inflicted on animals to test cleaning products."
The BUAV campaign received success in Parliament recently, when all major parties pledged to put a ban on animal testing for household products in their manifestos for the next election.
In 1997 the Government decided to stop granting licences for cosmetics tests on animals, but there is no such prohibition for household products.
The BUAV’s Humane "Cosmetics Standard" and "Household Products Standard" are recognisable by the Leaping Bunny logo, an internationally recognised and patented cruelty-free certification.
As we enter the final critical weeks for the revision of EU Directive 86/609 on the use of animals in experiments your emails are needed urgently !! BUAV findings show the total inadequacy of the proposals that are currently on the table.
It’s
Déjà Vu
with Another Media
Blackout
The International
Coalition to End the
Illegal Siege of Gaza is
marking the anniversary
of Israel’s 220-day
siege of Gaza, but you
might not know this if
you rely wholly on the
U...
"Justice For
Kiera!"http://www.thepeti
tionsite.com/164/JUSTICE-
FOR-KIERA
When Marianne Zelonis
came home from work one
Thursday evening in
April, she found her
beloved three year old
German Shepherd Kiera
lying motionless just
yards away from home ...
DOGS POST
GA+VA+KS+NC: These
wonderfull gentle Angels
need
Rescue/Addopt/Foster/Spon
sor/Transport NOW or they
face Death 29th or
30thDec!
Please help these
wonderfull Souls by
saving their Life (they
have only this One) and
giving them a caring...