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Four Mink Freed For Austrian Prisoners in Open Rescue

Animal Equalty - Open Rescue Team | 30.07.2008 16:02 | Animal Liberation | Ecology | Repression | World

The Open Rescue Team of Igualdad Animal (Animal Equalty) have rescued four mink from a fur farm in northern Spain. This is the second open rescue by Igualdad Animal (in August 2007, six baby pigs were rescued from an intensive farm).

Video  http://vimeo.com/1431989?pg=embed&sec=1431989
Photos  http://www.rescateabierto.org/igualdad-animal-rescata-cara-descubierta-cuatro-visones-de-una-granja-peletera



The Open Rescue Team of Igualdad Animal (Animal Equalty) have rescued four mink from a fur farm in northern Spain. This is the second open rescue by Igualdad Animal (in August 2007, six baby pigs were rescued from an intensive farm).

Video  http://vimeo.com/1431989?pg=embed&sec=1431989
Photos  http://www.rescateabierto.org/igualdad-animal-rescata-cara-descubierta-cuatro-visones-de-una-granja-peletera

Excerpt from rescue report (translation from  http://www.directaction.info):

"Although legally non-human animals, including mink, are considered property and therefore to remove them from cages is considered 'theft,' a criminal act, at Igualdad Animal we believe that no individual is the property of another and the moment has arrived to liberate our slaves. Just as in the past when some humans were considered property of others and this was an unjust situation, currently we are still involved with slavery. Animals are not property and to liberate them is not robbery but a legitimate act of justice.

With these open rescues we not only intend to rescue a few animals that were going to suffer and die, but we want to provoke a social debate that causes us to rethink the exploitation to which we subject the animals with whom we share the planet, and to bring about a change of mentality and habits of consumption in each one of us, because ultimately we are the ones who-- with our daily decisions of how we dress ourselves, feed ourselves, or entertain ourselves-- can put an end to the daily suffering and death of animals.

We also want to remember all of the victims who still remain in cages, to show our support for all those who rescue caged animals, and finally to dedicate this action to the Austrian prisoners Martin, Christian, Christof, Elmar, Felix, Jan, Jürgen, Kevin, Leo and Sabine, who at this moment are victims of an unjust judicial system."

Notes:

In August 2007, six baby pigs were rescued from an intensive farm, see  http://www.rescateabierto.org/primer-rescate-abierto-realizado-en-espana-igualdad-animal-rescata-seis-cerdos.

In late July, activists entered the fur farm and documented conditions inside. Four mink were carefully removed from cages and later released into a natural environment many miles away.

Austrian Prisoners:

Solidarity Website:  http://www.austriasolidarity.com
Legal Support  http://www.antirep2008.tk

Animal Equalty - Open Rescue Team
- Homepage: http://IgualdadAnimal.org

Comments

Hide the following 3 comments

er...

30.07.2008 16:45

a noble aim for sure, but i do hope these mink were not released into an ecosystem that can't support them, as has happened in the past.

Bill Oddity


Spanish mink, Euro-mink - American mink - ¿sure aint they all just mink?

30.07.2008 18:54

Castilla and León, Rioja, the Basque, Navarra, Aragón and Catalonia are all habitats in which the European mink Mustela lutreola are in danger of extinction. Which is jolly good news for people who want to see mink back in the north of Spain. Except when we look at the reasons why European mink are in danger of extinction. Coz it's not all just bad humans fault. Just as the European red squirrel has given way to the American grey squirrel (which with a shorter hibernation period wakes up and gets the nuts first) the European mink has given way to the American mink.

It's quite easy to tell a European mink from a American mink. A European mink is more brown than the one in the photo above.

Let us hope the 4 freed individuals demonstrate the altruism of gophers and solidarity of ermine with their endangered neighbours in enjoying their new habitat.

quite.


Stay in the dreys...

30.07.2008 20:57

Neither Red nor Grey Squirrels hibernate. They might stay in their dreys in really cold weather but they don't hibernate.

Sqiiiiiry