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ADIDAS’S LETTER:
Adidas says:
"Kangaroo leather is used by all sorts of manufacturers
globally to make a wide range of products....."
Fact:
This year alone, hunters are licensed to kill 3.8 million
adult kangaroos to supply the kangaroo industries in what
is the largest massacre of land animals on the planet. An
email recently sent out by John Kelly, spokesperson for the
Kangaroo Industry Association of Australia, states: "This
[soccer boot] industry is vital to the kangaroo industry.
Without it underpinning kangaroo skin prices the entire industry
would be at risk". With 70 per cent of the market for
professional football boots, Adidas is the kangaroo industry’s
largest customer - and therefore a driving force behind the
massacre.
Adidas says:
"Like the group Viva!, Adidas is opposed to kangaroos
being killed in an inhumane or cruel manner."
Fact:
It is a simple fact that when millions of kangaroos are being
shot, instances of cruelty and inhumane killing are unavoidable.
The Australian Government, the kangaroo industry and Adidas
all allege that kangaroos are shot "humanely" -
their definition of this being a single shot to the brain.
However, even the Code of Practice for the Humane Shooting
of Kangaroos (the guideline document which hunters are supposed
to follow) states: "No matter how carefully the shooter
aims, some kangaroos will not be killed outright". The
industry also claims to be self-regulating with regards to
humane/inhumane killing, in so much as processing plants will
reject the carcasses of kangaroos who have been shot in the
body, not the head, thereby encouraging shooters to aim accurately
and kill ‘humanely’. However, a report
carried out by the Australian RSPCA found that approximately
100,000 kangaroos per year are not killed humanely, and even
this is a conservative estimate as the figure is only based
on carcasses arriving at processing plants where their skins
are examined for bullet holes, no monitoring is actually done
in the field. The RSPCA’s estimate does not take into
account kangaroos who are shot in the body and whose bodies
are left behind because they would be rejected at the processing
plant, nor kangaroos who are only injured and left to die
in the outback, of whom the RSPCA report also states: "Accurate
figures on injury rates during shooting are extremely difficult
to obtain".
Furthermore, perhaps the most upsetting acts of cruelty
involve baby joeys - the ‘worthless’ byproducts
of the kangaroo slaughter. A mother kangaroo will often have
one joey in the pouch and another "at-foot". The
Code of Practice recommends pouch joeys be killed either by
decapitation with a sharp object or a heavy blow to the brain,
but hunters have previously admitted to using joeys as footballs,
hitting them with crowbars, smashing them against cars or
simply leaving them on the ground to die. Viva! has video
footage of one hunter dragging a joey from the pouch and
stamping on his/her head. At-foot joeys, according to the
Code, may also be shot, those who aren’t are left to hop off
into the night and without their mothers to protect and feed
them, will invariably die of starvation, predation, cold or
neglect. The RSPCA report questions both the use of decapitation
as a humane method of killing joeys, and also states "in
general, the use of a heavy blow to the head is not considered
a humane method of euthanasia for most species" and concludes
that "the only solution which would avoid the potential
of cruelty to pouch young would be to avoid shooting females
altogether".
Adidas says:
"This is why we insist that our suppliers fully comply
with the Australian Government’s strict rules on kangaroo
culling. These rules require those involved in culling to
obtain a licence or permit to operate from the Government.
These licensed operators must comply with a stringent code
of practice which controls how they operate."
Fact:
Unfortunately, the Australian government actively
supports and promotes the kangaroo massacre because of the
revenue it generates. Kangaroos do not need to be culled in
the first place, they are an integral part of Australia’s
fragile environment and should be valued as unique, sentient
beings.
The "Code of Practice" - the ‘strict rules’
Adidas is referring to - is a guideline document, not a law
and in order to obtain a licence, all hunters have to do is
to read it, understand it, and pass a one day marksmanship
course - although in Western Australia, the shooting test
isn’t even compulsory.
Monitoring the industry is extremely difficult as the hunting
takes place in the dead of night, miles away from civilisation
and very few rangers are employed by the states to oversee
the killing. For example in Queensland, the state with the
highest level of commercial kangaroo killing -1,378,505 kangaroos
killed commercially in 2000 - there were only six Queensland
Parks and Wildlife Service staff with responsibility for monitoring
the kangaroo harvest and overseeing the regulation of the
industry! Quotes from the RSPCA report confirm that the monitoring
of the industry is not exactly stringent: "From the discussions
carried out during this survey, it appeared that law enforcement
resources within State wildlife agencies had decreased since
1985, and several processors remarked about the lack of inspections
and any follow up reports" and that "one processor
pointed out that he had sent a tag from a body-shot kangaroo
to the appropriate wildlife agency but had not heard of any
result from this action." The fact that even kangaroo
processors themselves criticise the lack of inspections, follow
up reports and actions taken against those not complying with
the Code makes Adidas’s claims flimsy to say the least!
Adidas says:
"if our suppliers fail to comply with the law
they will be refused an export permit for the leather by the
Australian Government".
Fact:
There are no laws protecting kangaroos from cruelty.
What laws are in place relate to trade management, tagging
the bodies of dead kangaroos and the export of the processed
skins - not to animal welfare. In Western Australia, for example,
there have been only a few prosecutions involving the kangaroo
industry - two for supplying untagged carcasses to processors
and two for processors accepting them.
VIVA'S RESPONSE TO ENVIRONMENT AUSTRALIA:
The assurances given in the fact sheet by Environment Australia
are almost identical to those given by numerous other governments
in defence of slaughtering whales, tigers, elephants, rhinos
and a host of other animals who are now, or have been, on
the endangered list. They have all proved meaningless and
these creatures have been driven to the brink of extinction
by rampant exploitation, supported by governments and their
numerous ‘independent’ bodies. Fish are a classic
example - the most studied, monitored, scientifically assessed
and managed animals on earth. The result has been a catastrophe,
resulting in the collapse of fish populations world wide.
Australia’s exploitation of kangaroos is no different
and the quotas are set solely to meet commercial demand. Scientifically
it is unjustifiable, which is why the industry and government
refuse to discuss the latest studies and decline even to acknowledge
their existence. Morally, it is abhorrent, which is why they
also dismiss the cruelty and refuse to address the killing
and abandonment of baby joeys, pretending instead that the
killing is strictly controlled. There is almost no-one monitoring
the killing in the outback as it happens and no laws have
been introduced specifically to control shooters.
Australia has the worst record in the world for causing
the extinction of wildlife - currently, in Australia alone
there are 27 species listed as extinct, 33 as endangered,
51 as vulnerable, one as ‘conservation dependant’
and one as critically endangered.
Its environmental record is equally depressing, with vast
tracts of the country turning to desert because of its insistence
on grazing sheep and cattle - 160 million of them - on land
which is entirely unsuited to these animals’ hard hooves.
This developing catastrophe is well documented and beyond
argument but still the government continues with policies
of clear felling and encouragement of livestock farming. All
its assurances and claims have to be seen in this light. Kangaroos,
who have lived in harmony with the fragile environment for
millions of years and are essential to its regeneration and
ultimate survival, are the scapegoats.
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