State Of NZ Poultrey: Sick And Dying
State Of NZ Poultrey: Sick And Dying
10,000 young
chickens die from disease every day on New Zealand farms.
Three million one-day-old male chicks are gassed or shredded
alive every year, surplus to egg industry requirements. Nine
out of ten chickens are so grossly overweight they have
difficulty walking.
New Zealand animal advocacy
organisation SAFE today launches a consumer campaign to
condemn an industry that claims its welfare standards are
world class.
“During last night’s television
programme, Jamie’s Fowl Dinners, Jamie Oliver exposed the
shocking reality of modern poultry farming in Britain. We
believe New Zealanders will be appalled to learn that New
Zealand poultry farming practices are no different,” says
SAFE campaign director Hans Kriek.
“Despite being
routinely fed antibiotics many chickens fail to live to even
six weeks of age, the typical age of a chicken sold at the
supermarket. Given that over 10,000 birds die prematurely
due to ill health each day, it is reasonable to assume
thousands of sick and crippled birds are being processed and
eaten each week. Chicken is a leading cause of food
poisoning in this country and I can’t help but wonder if
the animals’ ill health has anything to do with this,”
says Mr Kriek.
“Of the 90 million meat chickens
intensively farmed in New Zealand over 90 per cent cannot
walk normally. Meat chickens suffer from a range of other
serious health problems due to their unnaturally fast growth
rate.”
SAFE will dump ‘dead and dying birds’
on the doorstep of the Poultry Industry Association
at
96D Carlton Gore Rd in Auckland from 12 noon today as
part of a roadside protest.
SAFE has also placed
advertisements in newspapers around the country calling on
New Zealanders to use their consumer power and no longer buy
cruelly produced poultry
products.
ends