dhartig@ wrote: Date: Mon, 17 Dec 2007 15:20:33 +0100 (CET)
From: dhartig@
To: dhartig@
Subject: Help Enforce EU Ban on Battery Cages - GERMANY MUST NOT CAVE IN

 (PERSONAL NOTE: PLEASE WRITE. SEEHOFER AND HIS PARTY ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR 
OVERTURNING THE ALREADY AGREED-ON BAN IN GERMANY THAT WAS TO TAKE EFFECT  2008. 
THE EGG LOBBY IN CONCERT WITH THE CURRENT COALITION POSTPONED THE BAN TIL 2009. 
THEY WANT TO POSTPONE IT INDEFINITELY !! DO NOT LET THEM !!!!)


Help Enforce EU Ban on Battery Cages 

In 1999, the European Union decided that battery cages for hens
would be banned by 2012. Now, members of the egg industry and
some EU countries are lobbying to overturn or delay the ban.
Read more and act now!
http://getactive.peta.org/ct/ddwjYD11y4S1/

MORE INFO:

Help enforce EU ban on battery cages

In 1999, the European Union judged that battery cages are so cruel they should 
be banned across the EU and passed legislation, known as the Laying Hens 
Directive, requiring the egg industry to stop confining hens in battery cages 
by 2012. Not surprisingly, members of the egg industry and some EU member 
states are lobbying to overturn or delay the ban because they mistakenly 
believe it will be economically damaging. In truth, it costs only pennies more 
to produce cage-free eggs instead of battery eggs, and surveys show that most 
consumers are willing to pay more for cage-free eggs. Many retailers and 
foodservice operators, including Marks and Spencer, McDonald's, Starbucks, and 
Waitrose, support the ban and sell only cage-free eggs in the UK. The cost will 
be even less if the government subsidises cage-free producers. 

A few extra pence is a small price to pay to help lessen animal suffering. Each 
year in the EU, around 300 million hens are crammed into filthy wire-mesh 
battery cages stacked tier upon tier in huge warehouses. Several birds are 
crowded into each cage, packed so tightly together that they are unable to 
spread even one wing. The birds suffer crippling leg injuries from standing on 
wire cage floors 24 hours a day, seven days a week, until they are killed. 
Their bones are brittle both from forced inactivity and because calcium is 
leached from their bodies to produce eggs.  Many more hens suffer from painful 
injuries when they're ripped from their cages, thrown into transport crates, 
and shipped to slaughter. Without even a shred of straw for comfort, all of the 
hen’s natural instincts – including nesting, perching, scratching and pecking – 
are denied. These birds never get the chance to breathe fresh air, feel the sun 
on their backs, build nests, raise their young, or do
 anything else that is natural and important to them.   

Lord Rooker, the UK Minister for Sustainable Food and Farming and Animal 
Health, recently announced that battery cages will be banned in the UK as of 
2012, despite opposition from the egg industry and regardless of what happens 
in the rest of Europe. 

The egg industry and many EU Member States are pushing for the Laying Hens 
Directive to be delayed for up to ten years. Germany has a separate nation ban 
due to come into force earlier than the EU ban – in 2009. However now doubts 
are cast over Germany’s commitment to their national ban as all the other 
northern EU member states have stressed that they do not wish the ban to be 
postponed but Germany is yet to make it clear whether or not they will support 
a postponement. 
  
You Can Help:
 
PETA is calling for Horst Seehofer, the German Agriculture Minister to lead the 
way towards an EU ban on battery cages for hens and enforce Germany’s own 
national ban in 2009. It is vitally important that the EU ban not be postponed 
and come into force as planned in 2012. Please write to Horst Seehofer asking 
him to help the 300 million hens in the EU who are currently crammed into 
filthy wire-mesh battery cages stacked tier upon tier in huge warehouses. 




http://www.chooseveg.com/meet-your-meat.asp
"There is no  religion without love, and people may talk as much as they like 
about their  religion, but if it does not teach them to be good and kind to 
other animals as  well as humans, it is all a sham."  -- Anna Sewell 

       
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