Day 115 - 06 Apr 95 - Page 06
1 A. Yes, there are, obviously, some common interests; if
2 the flesh is bruised by particularly bad handling then, of
3 course, it should be cut off and that would be a loss.
4
5 Q. So, sorry?
6 A. That is some protection, unfortunately, for the pig.
7 It is a bit strange to call, to talk about "freedom" when
8 the animal is really going to be massacred but at least
9 some changes have been made.
10
11 I must emphasise that much of that drive for improvement
12 has come from the animal welfare movement since, well,
13 going back to the certainly early 1980s and earlier than
14 that.
15
16 Q. What evidence do you have, Dr. Long, that what I would call
17 beneficial conditions which exist at G.D. Bowes & Sons are
18 the consequence of pressure from animal welfarists?
19 A. Particularly, I think, the farm animal welfare reports
20 which concern red meat slaughterhouses in this instance.
21 There have been other publications. There was one here,
22 the University Federation of Animal Welfare, a conference,
23 I think that was in the 1980s, on humane slaughter of
24 animals for food, and -----
25
26 MR. JUSTICE BELL: I am going to stop you there because the
27 question is not whether animal welfarists have been drawing
28 attention to the situation and how they suggest it could be
29 improved, but what evidence you have that the conditions
30 which exist at G.D. Bowes & Sons are the consequence of
31 pressure from animal welfarists as opposed, for example, to
32 the possibility that the Bowes family may be considerate
33 animal husbanders?
34 A. I think one has only to look, if you like, at the
35 television coverage of these issues as an indication, the
36 fact that the press has responded and exposed this. It is
37 almost every day now one reads of some animal welfare
38 matter and, certainly, animal welfare matters that concern
39 pigs as well as cattle.
40
41 Also, I might say that in the supermarkets in the last five
42 or six years, one has been seeing more effort made to
43 persuade the customer that the pigs are free range,
44 so-called free range, that they are happy, that the idea to
45 pass this off as happy meat, really, as the trade calls it.
46
47 MR. RAMPTON: You noticed, did you, that the pigs are, so far as
48 possible, kept in peer groups throughout their lives from
49 cradle to grave, did you not?
50 A. Yes.
51
52 Q. That is a benefit for the pig, is it not?
53 A. That is certainly an aspect of welfare and husbandry,
54 yes, good practice.
55
56 Q. You noticed that the sows were not mixed; that sisters were
57 kept together but that the rest of the sows were separated
58 from each other as to reduce the incidence of fighting, you
59 noticed that?
60 A. Yes, I did notice that.