Resistance To The Fur Trade
IMC UK Features | 16.10.2009 18:23 | Animal Liberation | Birmingham | World
With fur back in season so is the resistance to it. From raids at farms to sabotage of shops, this autumn has so far been another round of biting back. In the last two months farms imprisoning mink have been closed down in Germany by the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) and found abandoned in Italy by the Animal Liberation Investigation Unit (ALIU), while various shops selling fur have given up the cruel trade.
Since the launch of the West Yorkshire Animal Rights Group (WYARG) in August Best Vintage, Room 7, Accent Clothing and TK Maxx have stopped selling fur and with Daniel Footwear promising to follow suit, focus is now on Next One Leather (the last fur shop in West Yorkshire), by targeting their store and associates (1 | 2 | 3). In the West Midlands, the Western Animal Rights Network (WARN) launched a campaign against Madeleine Ann, ensuing three shops going fur free, with demos lasting under a month (1 | 2 | 3 | Video) after products were eventually sent back to the suppliers, ending their sale of fur products (Video). On the same day Le Scarpe issued a fur-free statement leading to harassment from police and new targets established in Cheltenham, while in the capital protests have escalated as anti-fur activists locked onto the London Fur Company's stall at the London Fashion Weekend, causing the organisers to ask the company to pack up and leave (Videos: 1 | 2).
Update: After two houses of campaigners in Leeds were raided in connection with an ALF action against Next One Leather, the fur shop has gone fur-free.
Links: West Yorkshire Animal Rights Group (WYARG) | It's A Knock Out | Next One Leather Campaign | Western Animal Rights Network (WARN) | Bite Back Magazine | Animal Liberation Front (ALF) | Max Mara Campaign | Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade (CAFT)
In Italy more than €100,000 worth of damage was caused to a mink farm near Padova by burning five vehicles and sabotaging machinery and buildings, while at a fur farm in Castel di Sangro all the cages were opened liberating 130 mink, all breeding cards destroyed and a pelting room burned down. The farms were previously targeted with a fire destroying a building in 2004 and an ALF raid in 2006.
Furthermore, early this month in the north west of Denmark 6,000 mink near Søndervig and 5,000 mink in Fousing were freed from cages at fur farms, alongside 1,000 mink released in Eksjo, Sweden, in addition to water pipes and equipment damaged causing the farm to announce it's closure.
The international campaign against fur selling chain MaxMara has also been making headlines with shop locks glued and a bomb hoax in Spain, an explosive attack by ALF Mexico during the global week of action and shops covered in red paint, slogans painted and windows smashed in Italy.
Previous features: Large anti-fur demo at Cricket in Liverpool | Nottingham Animal Rights get active | Campaigners Celebrate Victory On EU Seal Ban | Repression against anti-fur activists in Austria | Sell Fur? No, Just Fridges | Fur Cough
IMC UK Features
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National Anti-Fur March
18.10.2009 14:42
veg@n
Over 20,000 mink released from five fur farms in Spain/France
22.10.2009 22:21
Spain
France
Three of the farms were located near Abegondo (Galicia). The fourth farm was located several hundred miles away in Lubia (Soria).
In Lubia, some of the mink were recaptured, but others have been spotted miles away from the farm.
Charo Carrillo, the owner of a farm in the town of Oza dos Ríos, near Abegondo, told local media that the raid on her farm has ruined 20 years of work breeding mink for fur quality, color and other traits desired by the fur industry.
Another fur farmer, Pancho Vázquez Larumbe, estimated his losses at 300,000 Euros.
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According to media reports, during the night of October 15, approximately 4,200 mink escaped from a fur farm in the village of Saint-Cybranet (Dordogne) in southwest France. Cages were opened and the fence surrounding the farm was cut. A water system at the farm was also vandalized. Two days later, only 1,000 of the mink had been recaptured.
Thierry Agraffel, the owner of the farm (address: Lauzel, 24250 St Cybranet), cried to a local newspaper, "Twenty-one years of work and breeding completely destroyed...."
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