Pages tagged "animal welfare"

Sinn Féin must come clean on fox hunting - Cllr Flynn

Cllr Flynn said “Fox hunting is vile cruelty dressed up as ‘sport’. Sinn Féin’s vote in the Dáil yesterday (17th December), taken alongside their record in the Assembly, shows a clear pattern. When they are given a chance to ban hunting with dogs, they choose instead to defend it.

If Sinn Féin believes fox hunting is wrong, they should come out and say so. If they believe it should continue, they should at least be honest with the public. What they cannot do is claim the language of animal welfare while repeatedly voting to keep this bloodsport legal across the island of Ireland.

A recent Ireland Thinks poll reported that 72% of the Irish people want fox hunting banned.

In Northern Ireland, the only part of the UK where hunting with dogs remains legal, a public consultation drew over 18,000 responses, with more than three-quarters backing a ban.

The evidence is overwhelming, and so is the will of the people. Majorities across the island, including thousands who engaged directly in consultation here in Northern Ireland, demand change. It is time to end the hunting of wild animals with packs of dogs and finally bring our laws into line with modern standards of animal welfare."

ENDS


Ards & North Down Backs Ruby’s Law to Protect Pets and People from Domestic Abuse

Ards and North Down Borough Council is the first in Northern Ireland to support Ruby’s Law, a vital legal reform to protect companion animals in homes affected by domestic abuse.

The motion, proposed by Green Party Councillor Lauren Kendall and seconded by Independent Unionist Councillor Steven Irvine, calls for urgent changes recognising how abusers use pets for coercive control and violence.

Cllr Kendall said, “Ruby’s Law is about protection - protection for victims and for their animals. Abusers use pets as weapons to control and terrorise. This law would include animals in protective orders and recognise harm to pets as psychological abuse.”

PSNI recorded 30,000 domestic abuse incidents this year, making up 20% of reported crime. “Too many survivors are forced to choose between their own safety and the safety of their pets. Ruby’s Law would ensure no one has to make that heartbreaking choice.”

Ruby’s Law, founded by family law barrister Christina Warner and supported locally by Causeway Coast Dog Rescue and Women’s Aid, would allow protective orders to include pets - already being considered elsewhere in the UK.

Christina Warner, Barrister at Bedford Row Chambers, London, stated:
“As founder of Ruby’s Law, I commend Cllr Kendall and council for advancing this important motion. As a barrister specialising in family and criminal law, I have witnessed the devastating impact of coercive control where animals are used to intimidate, punish, or manipulate victims. Ruby’s Law represents a necessary evolution in our legal and moral duty, to recognise the interconnectedness of human and animal welfare and to protect victims from all forms of abuse, direct or indirect. This is how meaningful change begins, through courage, compassion, and collaboration.”
www.rubyslaw.co.uk

Emalyn Turkington, Chief Executive Officer, North Down & Ards Women's Aid:
"I would welcome Ruby's Law in Northern Ireland as it would be a vital step in removing a significant barrier to safety for women living with domestic abuse.  The inability of most refuges to accept pets currently acts as a significant, often insurmountable, barrier preventing women from escaping abusive homes. This forces survivors of domestic abuse to choose between staying in danger and abandoning a beloved animal. This loophole is well-known and exploited by abusers as a coercive tool, effectively trapping victims and enabling the perpetuation of abuse."

Tara Cunningham, Manager of Causeway Coast Dog Rescue, warmly welcomed the council’s support:
“This represents a vital step towards recognising that protecting pets means protecting people. Through Ruby’s Law, Causeway Coast Dog Rescue is working to make that change, ensuring that every victim and every companion animal is safeguarded under the law. We stand ready to collaborate with government, councils, and community partners to share resources, research, and expertise to make this legislation a reality.

This motion sends a clear message that Northern Ireland will not tolerate the use of animals as weapons in abusive relationships and calls on all other councils to publicly announce their support so we can appeal to the Minister for Justice and other responsible departments to make that change.” www.causewaycoastdogrescue.org

Cllr Irvine added, “Abusers use every tool at their disposal, including harming animals. Supporting Ruby’s Law says Northern Ireland will not tolerate cruelty - whether to people or pets.”

Cllr Kendall concluded, “This Council sends a message: protecting pets means protecting people. We urge other councils and Ministers to act now.”

ENDS


"Wealth more important than animal welfare" - Cllr Kendall

"Wealth more important than animal welfare" - Cllr Kendall

In a recent conference held in Stormont organised by Causeway Dog Rescue, animal welfare organisations agreed that Northern Ireland has reached a perfect storm.
Speaking after the Conference, Cllr Kendall said: "Northern Ireland is a gateway for greed. When is wealth more important than animal welfare?"
"We see a continued failure to prevent puppy profiteers. Successive ministers have stood by, whilst puppies are left in squalid conditions, denied the “Five basic Freedoms” of animal welfare, before being sold to line the pockets of profiteers. Animal charities and rescue organisations are left to pick up the financial and emotional tab."
"Now, we have a new DAERA Minister, and we see only virtue signalling characterised by the introduction of the XL Bully Ban and providing payments for euthanasia, contrary to expert advice and opinion."
"Nothing short of a systemic review is required. Only 50% of dogs in Northern Ireland have a licence, there is no enforced tracking, and breeder information is hidden behind closed doors.  Councils have enforcement powers but few animal welfare officers, with legislation and budgets falling far short of what is needed. Rate payers are expected to pay for the sins of puppy profiteers because our Councils are given no powers to collaborate and increase breeder fees, which could be a mechanism to ensure costs are borne by those who profit, and would fund improved enforcement and regulation."
"We need to stop animal abuse, stop profiteering from misery. We need to protect animals and protect people."
ENDS

APG on animal welfare "an opportunity to reaffirm our commitment to animal welfare" - Cllr Flynn

APG on animal welfare "an opportunity to reaffirm our commitment to animal welfare" - Cllr Flynn



The All-Party group on animal welfare met this afternoon for it's AGM and to discuss a plan for the year ahead.

Cllr Flynn said "I am delighted to sit on the Stormont all-party group for animal welfare as an observer member, to be able to put forward I and the Green Party's priorities for animal welfare."

Cllr Flynn continued "We want to see movement on animal welfare with the rest of this assembly mandate on issues such as Lucy's law, an issue on which I have campaigned for years, tougher legislation on breeding establishments, strengthening animal welfare standards and an animal welfare strategy for Northern Ireland."

"Northern Ireland has a terrible record when it comes to animal welfare standards and the illegal breeding of dogs and cats, we have a lot of work to do and plenty of regulation to bring to some of these industries which exploit animals, we must give councils and the police new powers of enforcement so that the public has confidence in our institutions to take the rights of animals seriously."

"We must use this opportunity for the rest of the assembly mandate to reaffirm our commitment to animal welfare."

ENDS

Note: Cllr Flynn will sit on the APG for animal welfare as a non-voting observer member.


Cllr Flynn responds to cuts to animal welfare posts

Cllr Flynn responds to cuts to animal welfare posts

"The £1.25m animal welfare budget provided by DEARA to the 11 local councils helps fund the activities of important animal welfare officers."

"To cut this funding now will be a disaster for animals in Northern Ireland, Council budgets are already stretched, local animal charities are at breaking point and DEARA is burying it's head in the sand."

"The letter from DEARA alludes to councils using council budgets to cover the animal welfare responsibility, however the only mechanism councils have to raise revenue around this is through dog licensing and licenses for breeding establishments. These fees are set in the dog licensing and breeding regulations and cannot be amended by local councils as a means of raising revenue to meet those responsibilities. I brought a motion to Belfast City Council a few years ago addressing these very issues and DEARA ignored our concerns."

"DEARA have a responsibility to ensure councils are fully equipped to take on the cost of full statutory responsibility for non-farmed animal welfare, providing adequate funding to councils is part of this."

"Northern Ireland has become rife with animal abuse and unscrupulous illegal puppy breeders, by removing even more resources from local councils trying to tackle this issue, DEARA is turning Northern Ireland into a safe haven for animal abusers and giving a carte blanche to puppy smugglers carrying out their illegal activity."

ENDS