Horse Slaughter / Animal Cruelty
May 1, 2009
Sports of The Times
Ignoble Endings Far From Winner’s Circle
By WILLIAM C. RHODEN
Thoroughbred
racing will hold its breath Saturday as the nation tunes in to the
135th running of the Kentucky Derby.
Since
Barbaro’s breakdown in the 2006 Preakness Stakes and the stunning
on-track euthanasia of Eight Belles at last year’s Derby, the racing
industry has been under scrutiny for everything from race-day
medication to track surfaces, toe grabs and the use of whips.
But in-competition breakdowns, dramatic as they are,
account for only a fraction of the total deaths generated by the
industry. The most significant source of racehorse deaths is the
slaughter industry, one driven by overbreeding and demand from the
lucrative global meat market. According to the American Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, more than 100,000 American horses are
slaughtered each year in Canada and Mexico to satisfy horse meat
markets in Europe and Asia.
The slaughter of
domestically bred horses represents a breach of the American covenant
between horses and humans: horses bred for sport, industry and
agriculture are not part of our food chain. They are not supposed to
meet death in a slaughterhouse.
Breeding
operations produce thousands of so-called surplus thoroughbreds. What
happens to the excess, the often anonymous horses? Some are sold to
owners who take them overseas. Some wind up racing in Japan. Some wind
up in slaughterhouses.
According to Equine
Advocates, a rescue group in Chatham, N.Y., the business of horse
racing is a major contributor to the slaughter industry. Of all the
horses slaughtered in Canada and Mexico every year, the group estimates
that roughly a third come from horse racing.
Alex
Waldrop, president and chief executive of the National Thoroughbred
Racing Association, rejected that overbreeding was to blame but
acknowledged that slaughter was an issue.
“The
prices that are being paid by foreign entities who want horse meat is
what’s driving slaughter, not the oversupply of horses,” Waldrop said.
This year an undercover investigator from
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals went inside Japan’s largest
horse slaughterhouse and filmed a young thoroughbred’s final moments
before being slaughtered. The video is disturbing. It shows in graphic
terms what happens to the unfortunate thoroughbreds who become spare
parts in a contracting industry.
How could a thoroughbred come to such a gruesome end? Easier than you think.
In
2002, Ferdinand, the 1986 Kentucky Derby winner, was slaughtered in
Japan. Since Ferdinand’s death, an estimated 2,000 more American
thoroughbreds have been exported to Japan. How many of those wound up
in slaughterhouses was not known.
In 1982, Arthur
Hancock had a lifelong dream fulfilled when his horse, Gato Del Sol,
won the Kentucky Derby. Gato was not successful as a stud, and in 1993,
Hancock sold his Derby winner to a farm in Germany for $100,000.
“I’ve got six children looking for one person
to feed them,” Hancock said. “I hated to sell him, but you’ve got to
make a living. I had a partner who wanted to sell him. I figured he’d
have a good home in Germany.”
Gato’s career as
a stallion did not improve in Europe. Then Hancock’s wife, Staci,
learned that Exceller, a top handicap horse who had been sold to stud
in Sweden, was killed in a slaughterhouse.
“The
story made my heart stop,” she recalled in a phone interview on
Wednesday. “If a champion horse like Exceller could end up in a
slaughterhouse in Europe, the same fate could be in store for Gato.”
In 1999, Hancock reacquired Gato Del Sol and brought him back to Stone Farm, where he died at age 28.
If
a prominent fourth-generation breeder can sell one of his Derby winners
overseas, imagine what goes on at the lowest rungs of the industry.
Many owners, faced with the choice of keeping retired
horses and continuing to pay for their feed and care, instead opt to
sell them at auction for $300 to $500 a horse, not realizing or not
caring that if they are exported they can eventually be slaughtered.
“We’ve got lots of work to do here,” Waldrop said.
“The problem is far from being solved. There is a high demand for horse
meat around the world, and they create a market for horses that
competes with our efforts to adopt and retrain these horses.”
The
last of the horse slaughterhouses in the United States were shut down
in 2007. But at least four states — Montana, Illinois, North Dakota and
Tennessee — have either proposed or contemplated legislation to
reintroduce horse slaughter. Two bills stuck in committee in the House
and the Senate would make it illegal to transport horses across state
lines or to foreign countries for the purpose of slaughter. The
industry should push Congress to pass pending anti-slaughter
legislation.
No one expects owners to stop selling
their horses to foreign breeders. But at the very least there should be
provisions that allow them to buy back the horse or arrange for
euthanasia as an alternative to slaughter.
A sport that refers to its animals as athletes shouldn’t send them to slaughter.
This industry desperately needs an infusion of ethics and backbone so that it can uphold our covenant with the American thoroughbred.
Coalition To Ban
Horse-Drawn Carriages
A Committee of the Coalition For New York City Animals, Inc.
Contact:
The Coalition for
NYC Animals, Inc.
P.O. Box 20247
Park West Station
New York, NY 10025
e-mail
Coalition@banhdc.org