Animal welfare and rights in Spain

Animal welfare and rights in Spain is about the treatment of and laws concerning non-human animals in Spain. Spain has moderate animal protections by international standards.[1]

Regulations

In 1877, Spain passed its first provision on animal cruelty, which prohibited the mistreatment of dogs. The Criminal Code of 1928 was the first law to incriminate the abuse of mistreatment of animals in general.[2]

Spain's current Penal Code imposes a penalty of three months to one year for cruelly mistreating pets or unjustifiably causing death or serious physical impairment. This legislation applies only to pets, and it is not clear whether this legislation protects animals from suffering caused by a failure to act.[1]

Law 32/2007 provides that the government will take measures to ensure that farm animals are not caused unnecessary suffering, and was enacted in order to comply with European Union requirements on farm animal welfare. Spain has at times been found lacking in the implementation of these provisions; for instance, in 2011 the European Commission issued a reasoned opinion calling on Spain to address deficiencies in complying with legislation on the welfare of animals at slaughter, and in 2012 the Commission called on Spain via letter of formal notice to take action in implementing the ban on barren battery cages. Animal nonprofit Compassion in World Farming has also reported evidence of non-compliance with EU animal welfare law related to pigs, including tail docking, sow stalls, and bedding.[1]

Law 32 also provides for the licensing of the use of animals in research, prohibits testing cosmetics on animals, and incorporates the Three Rs principles (reduce the number of animals used, refine methods to minimize suffering, and replace animal models where it is deemed possible).[1]

Spain's 17 provincial autonomous communities have power to legislate beyond the Law 32 provisions.[1]

In 2014, Spain received a C out of possible grades A,B,C,D,E,F,G on World Animal Protection's Animal Protection Index.[1]

Animal issues

Animals used for food

Animal agriculture

In 2013, Spain was producing approximately 600 million broiler chickens and 35 million egg-laying hens annually; these numbers were fairly constant over the preceding decade.[3] The pig meat production is Spain's largest livestock sector, and it has grown significantly since the 1980s. In 2014 the swine sector accounted for 37% of final livestock production and 14% of final agricultural production in Spain. In 2014, 43,483,000 pigs were killed for food. Between January and October 2015, nearly 2 million cows were killed for food.[4] Figures on the number of marine animals killed for food are not readily available, but in 2013 Spain caught 882,000 tons of wild fish and in 2012 produced 262,000 tons of aquaculture fish.[5]

As of a 2012 report by the Food and Agriculture Organization, Spain was the fifth-highest rabbit meat producer in the world, slaughtering around 50 million rabbits per year.[6] In investigations of 72 Spanish rabbit farms and 4 slaughterhouses from 2012-2014, animal activist group Animal Equality found common use of blunt force trauma to kill rabbits, workers throwing live rabbits into waste containers due to over-production, animals with open wounds or infections left in cages without veterinary treatment, cannibalism among some animals due to over-crowding, farms which had never received health and bio-security inspections, and dead animals rotting in cages next to live animals.[7]

Veganism

Figures on the number of vegans in Spain are not readily available. However, in 2007 the EU estimated that 4% of the Spanish population was vegetarian,[8] while a 2012 article placed the proportion at 0.5%.[9] Plant-based diets appear to be gaining in popularity; the number of vegan or vegetarian restaurants listed in Spain increased from 353 in 2011 to 686 in 2014.[10]

Animals used for research

According to official statistics, 821,570 research procedures were performed on non-human animals in Spain in 2014. Mice, rats, fish, and birds accounted for 93% of research animals in Spain. Of these procedures, 53% were categorized as subthreshold or mild, 27% as mild, 8% severe, and 12% non-recovery (i.e. the animal was killed).[11]

Festivals

Approximately 60,000 animals are killed in festivals throughout Spain each year. Activities at these festivals include pulling the heads off live chickens, throwing live turkeys off of a church tower, bullfighting, chasing bulls off of piers into the sea, chasing bulls down the streets with flaming brands attached to their horns, and dragging a bull by its horns and forcing it to bow in front of the statue of a saint before being slaughtered. An estimated 11,000 bulls were tortured and killed in Spanish festivals in 2014.[12]

Animals used for clothing

As of 2013, Spain was producing approximately 700,000 mink pelts annually, with mink fur production rapidly growing.[13] In undercover investigation of the Spanish mink farm Eurozeltifur, animal activist group Animal Equality obtained footage of mink with severed limbs due to cannibalism, and of mink killed by the standard method of gas poisoning, which causes seizures, edema, and bleeding in the lungs before the mink die.[14]

Animal personhood

In 2007, Spain's Balearic Islands province granted legal personhood to great apes. In 2008, Spain's lower house of Parliament passed a non-binding resolution granting legal personhood to apes,[15] but the formal actions needed from the federal government to make this formal law have not been taken.[1]

Animal activism

The first Spanish animal rights group, Association for the Defense of Animal Rights (ADDA), was founded in 1975.[16] The ADDA's activities include lobbying for improved animal welfare policies at local, regional, national, and European levels (e.g. pushing for bans on bullfighting in Barcelona and Catalonia), conducting informational campaigns, and promoting alternatives to animal testing.[17]

In 2003, the first political party against animal cruelty, the Animalist Party Against Mistreatment of Animals (PACMA), was founded. PACMA has yet to reach representation in the national parliament.[16]

In 2007, Animal Equality activists conducted an open rescue of three pigs from a Spanish pig farm. Also in 2007, eleven Animal Liberation Front activists were detained after releasing roughly 20,000 mink from a fur farm. In 2011, a group of unknown activists removed 36 dogs from Isoquimem, a company which breeds dogs for research, generating one of the largest media responses in the history of the Spanish animal rights movement.[16]

The international animal activist nonprofit Animal Equality is active in Spain, having conducted undercover investigations of animal farms, open rescues of farmed animals, bull-fighting protests, distributing leaflets about veganism, and at one point in 2014 having the most social media followers of any non-governmental organization in Spain.[18]

gollark: Again, that is SPUDNET's role, though that basically just works by requiring a key rather than fancy crypto things.
gollark: No, doing that properly would require many tricky cryptography things.
gollark: The GTech trilaterator array just listens on the 128 channels most recently, er, transmitted on, as obtained by the Anavrins VLA.
gollark: SPUDNET is more suitable for that.
gollark: Encryption is your own problem.

See also

General

By country

References

  1. World Animal Protection (November 2, 2014). "Spain". Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  2. Lois Laimene Lelanchon (2013). "Detailed Discussion of Anti-maltreatment Laws in France and Spain". Retrieved May 4, 2016.
  3. Gonzalo Mateos; et al. "Poultry Production in Spain: New Advances in Feeding and Nutrition Practice" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 25, 2016. Retrieved August 21, 2016.
  4. Carmen Valverde (February 2, 2016). "Spain reaches in 2015 record levels on beef and pork production" (PDF). Retrieved August 21, 2016.
  5. eurostat (June 2015). "Fishery statistics". Retrieved August 21, 2016.
  6. "Rabbit meat production in the EU" (PDF). September 2014. Retrieved August 22, 2016.
  7. Animal Equality (May 23, 2014). "New undercover investigation reveals cruelty inside rabbit farms linked to the UK". Retrieved August 22, 2016.
  8. "EVU! - How many Veggies". Euroveg.eu. 2007-11-18. Archived from the original on March 1, 2009. Retrieved August 21, 2016.
  9. "Comer en verde | Sociedad | EL PAÍS" (in Spanish). Sociedad.elpais.com. 2012-05-07. Retrieved August 21, 2016.
  10. Trevor Baker (October 13, 2014). "Spain gets taste for greens as vegans, vegetarians and vegivores flourish". Retrieved August 21, 2016.
  11. "Spain publishes animal research statistics for 2014". November 23, 2015. Retrieved August 21, 2016.
  12. Stephen Burgen (July 6, 2015). "'We're a violent nation' – director tackles Spain's festival culture of animal cruelty". Retrieved August 21, 2016.
  13. sagafurs (August 21, 2013). "Spain emerging as a quality-oriented mink producer". Retrieved August 22, 2016.
  14. Animal Equality. "Animal Equality records the killing of minks in one of the biggest fur farms in Spain". Retrieved August 22, 2016.
  15. Justin Fox (2012). "Great Ape Personhood". Retrieved August 23, 2016.
  16. Animal Rights Extremism. "The evolution of animal rights groups in Spain" (PDF). Retrieved August 22, 2016.
  17. ADDA. "Initial aims and achievements". Archived from the original on August 26, 2016. Retrieved August 22, 2016.
  18. Animal Charity Evaluators (December 2014). "Animal Equality Review". Retrieved August 23, 2016.
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