Inhumane slaughter of horses ‘does not happen in Ireland’

Department of Agriculture officials comment on BBC documentary at Dáil committee

Alleged inhumane practices surrounding the slaughter of horses in the UK ‘would never happen in Ireland’
Alleged inhumane practices surrounding the slaughter of horses in the UK ‘would never happen in Ireland’

The alleged inhumane practices surrounding the slaughter of horses in the UK – including many hundreds of Irish racehorses – contained in a BBC documentary would never happen in Ireland, the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine hasd said.

BBC Panorama disclosed that thousands of racehorses are being sent to slaughter in Ireland and the UK. Secret video recording from an abattoir in Swindon showed animals were being killed in an apparently cruel way with slaughtermen shooting animals together, and from distance, and injured animals being apparently transported hundreds of miles.

Michael Sheahan, the deputy chief veterinary officer of the Department, told the Oireachtas Agriculture Committee that horses slaughtered in Ireland are dealt with in the same way as cattle.

“The single most surprising thing [in the documentary] was the method of slaughter,” he said.

READ MORE

“We appear to see horses being led into a room or antechamber and appear to see a slaughterman with a rifle. In some cases it appears he was taking a shot at the horse from a distance.”

He said nothing like that would be allowed in Ireland. “There is no question we would allow a horse to wander around a room and then be held by an individual and then shot by another,” he said.

He said what happens in an Irish abattoir is that the horses are sent to a restraining box, are properly restrained and are then stunned and then killed.

“They operate to the exact same standards as a beef slaughter plant,” he said, saying there was always a Department of Agriculture veterinary surgeon present.

Mr Sheahan said only one slaughter plant for horses was licensed in Ireland: “I am happy to say we are satisfied with the way things operate in the slaughter plant.”

He did accept that the system for tracing the movement of horses was “nowhere near as good” as it was in the cattle sector.

He said traceability of cattle in Ireland was among the best in the world. “We have a Rolls Royce system for cattle,” he said, saying it had taken 50 years to develop.

He said traceability for horses had improved considerably and that there was now microchipping. In addition, 27,000 premises where horses were kept had now been registered, the committee was told.

Mr Sheahan said there were still several pieces of the jigsaw to be completed in terms of tracing, the main one being an equine census.

Mr Sheahan said the transport of an injured animal across long distances as was shown in the documentary was illegal. “That is unequivocal,” he said.

He also pointed out the system for moving horses to and from the UK had changed since Brexit. Before January horses could be easily moved without the need for checks but that had changed since then.

Committee members, including chairman Jackie Cahill (Fianna Fáil), expressed repulsion and horror at some of the practices disclosed in the BBC film. Mr Cahill told the committee it had been difficult to watch and said the committee would return to investigate the issue specifically at a later date.

Joe Flaherty (Fiann Fáil) ssid the programme made for “harrowing viewing” and said there was an issue with traceability of horses in Ireland.

“We are a horse-loving nation and greatly pride ourselves on our reputation as an equine nation

“We know the life of a calf from the day it is born to the day it is put on a plate,” he said.

“We need traceability of horses in one central database,” he added.

Senator Rónan Mullen said the presentation of horse racing to the public was that there was a great love for the horse

“We might be a horse-loving nation, and while there might be people in horse racing who do love horses there seems to be a lot of people in the horse racing industry who don’t love horses and see them as machines to make money,” he said.

He asked Department officials were they being too conservative in their approach to the work file and were they pursing an animal-welfare agenda and were they aware of such practices?

The assistant secretary general of the Department, Kevin Smith, replied: “I state quite categorically I knew nothing of this until I saw (the programme) last night. There is a legitimate way of dealing with injured animals or with euthanasia. It can be done humanely.”

In relation to the ostensible issue of discussion for the committee – allegations of doping in the horse racing industry – Mr Smith was asked about funding, salaries and the independence of the Irish Horse Racing Board (IHRB), which regulates the industry, in conjunction with the Department.

Mr Smith defended the transparency, but he did say an issue had arisen about the independence of the IHRB board as well as its gender balance. Several deputies, including Matt Carthy of Sinn Féin, said the board included horse-industry ‘insiders’ and could not be considered to be independent.

“The relationship is far too cosy. The IHRB is an independent body. Part of the difficulty is it’s not seen as independent.

“It is seen as an organisation for and by the industry, and there is no independence in terms of the board,” said Mr Carthy.

Harry McGee

Harry McGee

Harry McGee is a Political Correspondent with The Irish Times