European
Union Bans American
Horsemeat
Europeans focus on food safety issue: no
more poisoned American Horse Meat
August 6, 2009 -- Hitchcock, Texas --
For decades, the gourmet diners of Europe and Japan have eaten American horse
meat poisoned by chemical contamination. The horse flesh exporting by
unscrupulous producers and horse
slaughter plants will come to an end in April of
2010. The new rules enacted by the European Union will mandate
chemical free horse meat
entering those countries.
American horses are routinely given
powerful chemicals prohibited for human consumption such as wormers, Phenylbutazone (Bute),
and a host of other deadly medications which are life giving to a horse but
cause serious medical issues when ingested by humans. Like DDT, banned
for similar reasons, some of these compounds such as Bute
remain in a horse's body long after administered. Studies indicate medical
issues such as birth defects,
anemia, and cancer are brought on when these dangerous chemicals are consumed
by humans.
The ban was quietly announced by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency
in late July. It quickly exploded across the Internet as news of it made its
way to anti-slaughter websites and finally to mainstream equine media
worldwide. With the new ban in place, the slaughter of horses exposed to these
drugs will stop and the production of commercially available horse meat
will grind to a halt.
“We have known of the dangers of
chemicals in American horsemeat for years, but our warnings have often fallen
on deaf ears,” said Jerry Finch, founder of Habitat for Horses,
the nation’s largest all breed equine rescue organization.
“Thankfully, agencies in the European
Union responsible for health safety realized that there is virtually no testing
for dangerous chemicals in American horses being sold for food,” he said.
“Foreign governments will inadvertently bring the slaughter of American horses
to a halt while the American government, with their failure to pass
legislation, has simply ignored the health of the European people.”
Finch says that the same EU rules will
halt the export of American horses slaughtered in Mexico for European
consumption.
Habitat for Horses (HfH)
is a not-for-profit equine protection agency committed to the prevention,
rescue and rehabilitation of neglected and abused horses. The largest
organization of its kind in North
America, HfH operates a rehabilitation
ranch in Hitchcock, Texas, as well as a growing network of foster homes throughout
the United States.
Contact: Valerie Kennedy, Director of
Public Relations, Habitat for Horses, Inc,
312-371-4933