FOUR PAWS
Vier Pfoten International   International
Vier Pfoten Europe   Europe
Vier Pfoten Austria   Austria
Vier Pfoten Bulgaria   Bulgaria
Vier Pfoten Germany   Germany
Vier Pfoten Europe   Hungary
Vier Pfoten Niederlande   Netherlands
Vier Pfoten Europe   Romania
Vier Pfoten Europe   South Africa
Vier Pfoten Europe   Switzerland
Vier Pfoten Ukraine  Ukraine
Vier Pfoten United Kingdom   United Kingdom
Vier Pfoten USA  USA

FOUR PAWS @
RSS Feed
Myspace twitter twitter

Newsletter
  Firstname
  
  Lastname
  
  E-mail
  
  Gender
 
  Country
  

 

 
Bookmark and Share

EU bans the import of wild birds

FOUR PAWS welcomes a milestone in the fight against the international animal trade
Alt
The year 2007 starts pretty good for animal welfare: on 11th January 2007 the European Commission has decided to permanently ban imports for wild birds into the EU. The crucial factor for this decision was an expertise from the European Food Safety Authority, where the big risk to the health of humans, deriving from the import of wild birds, was emphasized. Furthermore it confirmed the catastrophic animal welfare problems resulting from the international animal trade.

The EU was the worlds largest importer of exotic birds until an import ban was announced on 27th October 2005, resulting from the bird flu danger at that time. About 87% of the transports recorded, or almost two million birds were imported each year into the EU. On top of that as many died during the transport or the hunt – a tragedy of millions of animals, which brought many bird species to the edge of extinction. FOUR PAWS therefore has been fighting together with a broad alliance of animal-, species- and environmental organizations to ban the trade of exotic birds. In the course of the spreading of bird flu, the worldwide trade in wild birds was also identified as a potential risk factor. After several cases of smuggled wild birds, which were found at airports and which were infected, confirmed the assumptions and led to the imposition of import bans.

To ensure the success of the now effective general import ban will depend on an efficient control of the existing exceptions like for example the import of bred birds. The procedures intended has to be supervised strictly, or otherwise there will still be danger for humans and animals.

Bookmark and Share




EU bans the import of wild birds
The animal welfare action plan from the European Commission
Requirements for a successful implementation of the action plan
Animal welfare as an important topic for the European population
A plan of international dimensions

VIER PFOTEN Austria | VIER PFOTEN Germany | VIER PFOTEN Switzerland | VIER PFOTEN Netherlands
VIER PFOTEN United Kingdom | VIER PFOTEN Hungary | VIER PFOTEN Romania | VIER PFOTEN Bulgaria
VIER PFOTEN International | VIER PFOTEN EU-Office