October 15, 2013

 

Animal welfare advocates urge India to ban 'battery cages'

 

 

The President of the World Council of Arya Samaj, Swami Agnivesh, in his letter to Environment Minister Jayanthi Natarajan, urged the Indian government to phase out the use of "barren battery cages" reflecting the poultry industry's inhumane confinement of hens.

 

Agnivesh said, "An overwhelming majority of hens used in the egg industry are consigned to barren battery cages, which are so small that each bird is given a space no larger than A4 size sheet of paper. The battery cages prevent all forms of natural behaviours, such as nesting, perching and roosting, scratching and foraging, exercising and spreading their wings. I urge the Government of India to ban such a barbaric practice of confining egg laying hens."

 

The Animal Welfare Board of India has issued a directive that the practice of confining hens in barren battery cages clearly violates the provisions of Section 11(1) (e) of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960. The provisions require that animals confined to cages be provided with reasonable opportunity for movement. Further, the confinement of hens in overcrowded and unhygienic battery cages facilitates the immune suppression in birds, providing a breeding ground for foodborne diseases like Salmonella.

 

N. G. Jayasimha, HSI/India managing director said that they are calling the Government of India to move the Indian poultry industry towards being a global leader in animal welfare and should immediately establish clear timelines to phase out the use of barren battery cages in Indian poultry farms.

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