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ROYAL NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTION OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS
For Release: 22nd April 2003
AIR NEW ZEALAND DRAWS PRAISE ON ETHICS ISSUE
Air New Zealand's unambiguous response to an ethical issue has drawn praise
from the Royal New Zealand SPCA.
The airline has written to the SPCA, confirming that it will no longer
include pâté de foie gras on inflight menus.
Pâté de foie gras, a traditional European "delicacy",
is produced through the regular force-feeding of ducks or geese, a practice
which is now internationally condemned by animal welfare advocates.
In addition to announcing that foie gras is no longer to feature on inflight
menus for the airline's premium classes, Air New Zealand is to include
a policy statement in its Food and Wine strategy to ensure that products
"of this nature" will be excluded in future.
"We wrote to Air New Zealand recently after receiving a complaint
that foie gras had been served on an international flight," says
the Royal New Zealand SPCA's Chief Executive Officer, Peter Blomkamp.
"We are more than a little impressed by Air New Zealand's unambiguous
and decisive action in response to our approach. The airline has set an
excellent example of how major corporates should behave when faced with
ethical issues," he says.
Mr Blomkamp adds that there has been a threefold increase in global production
of pâté de foie gras over the past decade, as a result of
new factory-farm production methods, which are in many respects even less
humane than those traditionally employed.
"According to our colleagues in the World Society for the Protection
of Animals, birds are typically kept in cages so small they are unable
to stand or stretch their wings. They are commonly fed by forcing a pneumatic
pump down the throat, which injects half a kilo of maize and fat in a
few seconds.
"This awful process gets repeated two or three times a day for up
to three weeks. Many birds die prematurely from cardiac or renal failure
or liver haemorrhage. If they live long enough to be slaughtered, their
livers may be swollen to ten times the normal size," he says.
"It would certainly have been unfortunate if our national airline's
overseas passengers had gained the impression that these barbaric practices
were acceptable to New Zealanders.
Hopefully, other airlines will now follow Air New Zealand's example and
wipe foie gras for ever from their menus, if they have not already done
so," Mr Blomkamp adds.
For further
information, please contact:
Peter Blomkamp
Chief Executive Officer
Royal New Zealand SPCA
09 827 6094
021 179 0072
Released
by Ian Morrison, Matter of Fact Communications
Tel: 09 575
3223, Fax: 09 575 3220, Email: matfact@ww.co.nz
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