"The nature and method of slaughter
cannot be ignored. It is barbaric and inhumane. Each night thousands
of animals are butchered, many are maimed, the young in pouch
are cruelly dispatched and the young at foot are left to fend
for themselves. Any reasonable person would not wish to be a
party to this slaughter by purchasing kangaroo products."
Former Senator George Georges (Queensland)
heard evidence about kangaroo killing for three and a half years
as Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Animal Welfare
from December 9th, 1983 to June 5th, 1987. (Preface of "The
Kangaroo BETRAYED!).
"The cruelty and suffering that
we have already seen in the native animal industries means that
this is no longer an experiment. Hundreds of thousands of kangaroos
each year are not killed humanely, emu chicks in Western Australia
are "de-toed" without anaesthesia to reduce risks to handlers,
and possums in Tasmania are trapped, transported and killed
over a period that now has blown out to anything up to 48 hours.
The trade in wildlife is a trade based on profit, without any
place for compassion." (Foreword of 'The Kangaroo BETRAYED!'
Professor Peter Singer)
Kangaroos are shot in the Australian
outback by spotlighting at night. One million joeys die alone.
Three aspects cause great cruelty:
- Because head shots are attempted,
these may not strike the brain but injure the head including
the mouth. These kangaroos escape into the scrub outside the
spotlight's beam and will die over several days from their
horrific injuries and starvation.
- In-pouch joeys are killed by
stomping on them or bashing them with a stick or against a
vehicle. Several blows may be necessary.
- Ex-pouch joeys are still reliant
on their mother's milk for protein, warmth in the cold winter's
nights, protection from predators, and they are dependent
on their mothers for psychic support. They spend time in and
out of the pouch and when their mothers are killed, they are
left to fend for themselves.
Video evidence is available in
the ABC documentary "Kangaroos - Faces in the Mob" and the explicit
cruelty in the International Fund for Animal Welfare film of
Greg Eichner, NSW shooter - farmer. "The kangaroo killing and
game meat lobby can no longer conceal the extreme brutality
of their trade. For years we have been calling for an end to
this industry which causes the lingering death of 1,000,000
joeys. These joeys similar to the joey Jaffa in 'Faces in the
Mob' are orphaned when their mothers are shot in the so-called
harvest." (Dr John Auty)

All decent Australians should become
active in calling upon Federal and State politicians to outlaw
this trade - a trade as horrible as the slow slaughter of whales
and the clubbing to death of seals or any of the other terrible
abuses of wildlife around the world.
Aside from the cruelty which is
inherent in the commercial kangaroo killing industry, one land
holder in Western NSW has described "pitting" which is the digging
of pits to bury kangaroos that have been killed illegally. These
same land holders want to legally increase their income by skin
only shooting which is more cruel than the carcass trade. They
can shoot the kangaroos inhumanely as long as the skin itself
is not damaged for the export markets and it is not detected
(impossible to police).
Skin only shooting is not only
more cruel but it is also open to many illegal abuses. The NSW
NPWS fought a Court Case in 1996 to stop this trade and won.
Now the landholders have 'friends' in political circles who
they are lobbying to reopen the skin only trade in NSW. Kangaroos
are killed primarily for their leather and skins. Many millions
of kangaroos are killed for the shoe leather trade to Italy
and the USA.
NSW farmers have threatened to
use political pressure to get what they want (that is, less
kangaroos). The welfare of kangaroos is only paid lip service
and are the scapegoats for falling prices and incomes. A Tibooburra,
NSW farmer (1999) found over 139 kangaroos dead in his front
garden from poisoning (the killing is not policed). NSW land
holders want kangaroos to come under the control of the Department
of Agriculture and taken away from the NSW National Parks and
Wildlife Service and they are using their political clout to
ensure kangaroo numbers are reduced to "tolerable" levels, which
may be zero numbers of kangaroos.
