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Australian cattle ‘sledgehammered’ in Vietnam abattoirs

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Vietnamese abattoir workers have been filmed using sledgehammers to bludgeon Australian cattle, activists said Thursday, prompting some exporters to stop supplying livestock to some slaughterhouses in the southeast Asian nation.

Undercover investigators working for Animals Australia filmed footage last month of one worker clubbing a cow over the head five times with a sledgehammer before it fell to the ground beside the bodies of two other cows.

The man then hit it another four times before it finally died.

The activist group said it visited 13 slaughterhouses in North and Central Vietnam, home to a multimillion dollar industry and one of Australia's biggest live cattle export markets, in what it said was "their most dangerous operation ever".

"Only two met Australian requirements for approved abattoirs," campaign director Lyn White told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, which aired the footage on national television Thursday.

Australia's live cattle export trade has been under the spotlight before  notably in 2013 when ...
Australia's live cattle export trade has been under the spotlight before, notably in 2013 when shipments to Egypt were suspended for months after abattoir footage showed "horrific" mistreatment of cows
Adek Berry, AFP/File

"I thought I'd seen it all, and I haven't," she said.

Animals Australia said ear tags were removed from cattle so they could not be linked back to exporters and that the killings took place in "filthy, unhygienic conditions".

It is the second time the group has exposed alleged abuses in Vietnamese abattoirs, claiming thousands of Australian cattle have been slaughtered in facilities not approved by Canberra, as required by export controls.

White said Animal Australia chose not to publicly release video it shot last year, but instead supplied it to the Australian Livestock Exporters Council (ALEC).

She claims the industry body promised a response within six weeks, but nothing happened which was why she went public.

ALEC chairman Simon Crean said the procedures that were filmed were "inexcusable".

"No animal should have to go through the fear or the pain," Crean told broadcaster ABC. "We've determined that... we should stop the supply of animals to all of the facilities that are under investigation."

ALEC added in a statement it had suspended abattoirs in Vietnam's Bai Do region and a feedlot in Haiphong from receiving Australian livestock.

It said it would also review management and oversight of cattle control and traceability to determine how some could end up in non-approved facilities.

The Department of Agriculture and Water Resources ordered a probe and said the animals depicted in the footage were likely exported from the nation.

"Exporters were immediately informed of the complaint so that urgent action could be taken to protect the welfare of cattle currently in Vietnam," it said in a statement.

Australia's live cattle export trade has been under the spotlight before, notably in 2013 when shipments to Egypt were suspended for months after abattoir footage showed "horrific" mistreatment of cows.

Trade to Indonesia was also temporary halted in 2011 on cruelty concerns.

Overall, the government estimates the live export trade is worth about US$800 million a year to Australia and employs thousands of people.

Vietnamese abattoir workers have been filmed using sledgehammers to bludgeon Australian cattle, activists said Thursday, prompting some exporters to stop supplying livestock to some slaughterhouses in the southeast Asian nation.

Undercover investigators working for Animals Australia filmed footage last month of one worker clubbing a cow over the head five times with a sledgehammer before it fell to the ground beside the bodies of two other cows.

The man then hit it another four times before it finally died.

The activist group said it visited 13 slaughterhouses in North and Central Vietnam, home to a multimillion dollar industry and one of Australia’s biggest live cattle export markets, in what it said was “their most dangerous operation ever”.

“Only two met Australian requirements for approved abattoirs,” campaign director Lyn White told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, which aired the footage on national television Thursday.

Australia's live cattle export trade has been under the spotlight before  notably in 2013 when ...

Australia's live cattle export trade has been under the spotlight before, notably in 2013 when shipments to Egypt were suspended for months after abattoir footage showed “horrific” mistreatment of cows
Adek Berry, AFP/File

“I thought I’d seen it all, and I haven’t,” she said.

Animals Australia said ear tags were removed from cattle so they could not be linked back to exporters and that the killings took place in “filthy, unhygienic conditions”.

It is the second time the group has exposed alleged abuses in Vietnamese abattoirs, claiming thousands of Australian cattle have been slaughtered in facilities not approved by Canberra, as required by export controls.

White said Animal Australia chose not to publicly release video it shot last year, but instead supplied it to the Australian Livestock Exporters Council (ALEC).

She claims the industry body promised a response within six weeks, but nothing happened which was why she went public.

ALEC chairman Simon Crean said the procedures that were filmed were “inexcusable”.

“No animal should have to go through the fear or the pain,” Crean told broadcaster ABC. “We’ve determined that… we should stop the supply of animals to all of the facilities that are under investigation.”

ALEC added in a statement it had suspended abattoirs in Vietnam’s Bai Do region and a feedlot in Haiphong from receiving Australian livestock.

It said it would also review management and oversight of cattle control and traceability to determine how some could end up in non-approved facilities.

The Department of Agriculture and Water Resources ordered a probe and said the animals depicted in the footage were likely exported from the nation.

“Exporters were immediately informed of the complaint so that urgent action could be taken to protect the welfare of cattle currently in Vietnam,” it said in a statement.

Australia’s live cattle export trade has been under the spotlight before, notably in 2013 when shipments to Egypt were suspended for months after abattoir footage showed “horrific” mistreatment of cows.

Trade to Indonesia was also temporary halted in 2011 on cruelty concerns.

Overall, the government estimates the live export trade is worth about US$800 million a year to Australia and employs thousands of people.

AFP
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