|

Latest News

Caribbean Airlines no longer carrying monkeys

Sunday, August 21, 2011



LONDON, UK (CMC) – The British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV) says that Caribbean Airlines has just been added to the growing list of airlines that refuse to ship primates for research.

“Caribbean Airlines will not accept primates used for laboratory research experimentation and exploitation purposes,” the BUAV said, quoting the airline in a statement issued here.

As part of its "Cargo Cruelty" campaign, the BUAV has been working to raise awareness about the “unseen passengers,” which travel on flights in cargo destined for research labs around the world.

The BUAV said it has also been working with the Animal Rights Foundation of Florida (ARFF) to urge Caribbean Airlines to “stop supporting this cruel trade.”

BUAV said Caribbean Airlines regularly transported monkeys from Barbados, and St Kitts and Nevis, which had been taken from their homes and families in the wild and exported for experimentation in biomedical research or for breeding programmes.

“Airlines play a key role in the international trade in primates for research by transporting monkeys from supply facilities in countries such as Mauritius, Vietnam, St Kitts, China and Cambodia, for laboratories around the world,” it said.

“Cruelty and suffering are an intrinsic part of the trade. Some monkeys are taken from the wild; others are the offspring of wild-caught individuals forced into captivity for a lifetime of breeding. All are torn from their family groups, packed into small, wooden crates and shipped as cargo, usually on extremely long journeys for laboratories in the UK, USA, Europe and Japan,” it added.

Michelle Thew, BUAV’s chief executive, said: “We want to thank all our supporters who have taken the time to contact Caribbean Airlines, and the airline itself for making the right decision and ceasing involvement in the cruel trade in primates for research.

“The BUAV will continue its campaign to push for all airlines to prohibit the carriage of primates for this purpose,” she added.



Passenger restrained on flight to Miami arrested

  0 comments

 

Samuels century leads Windies fightback

  0 comments

 

Bolt clocks pedestrian time to win Ostrava 100m

  0 comments

 

VCB wins in Ostrava

  0 comments

 

Churches raising money to fight gay marriage

  0 comments

 

Escaped prisoner back in custody

  0 comments

 

Customs officers arrested for larceny

  0 comments

 

Holding lambastes WICB, Gibson over handling of senior players

  0 comments

 

Windies struggle again after top order collapse

  0 comments

 

Female child found wandering Downtown

  0 comments

 

GCT to go down, white rum prices going up

  0 comments

 

Hear the Children's Cry condemns treatment of Mona student

  0 comments

 

Health of Jamaica's children improving — Ferguson

  0 comments

 

GG calls on church to conduct a ‘ministry of healing’

  0 comments

 

Cops looking for Jody-Ann McNarrin

  0 comments

 

'Ratty' killed in motor vehicle accident

  0 comments

 

Busy waives right to extradition hearing

  0 comments

 

Woman left lying in her own urine in jail before she died

  0 comments

 

Emergency repair work disrupts water supply in St James

  0 comments

 

Rowvain Lord missing

  0 comments

 

Today's Cartoon


Poll

 Do you feel buying into Facebook now is a good investment for the long-run? 
Yes
No

View Results

Results published weekly in Sunday Finance


Username:
Password: