|
|
|
November 10, 2009 |
||
|
Tel Aviv Bans Horse-Drawn Carts |
||
|
CHAI's 10-year campaign to get cart horses banned from the streets of Tel
Aviv achieved success this past week when the city announced that, at long
last, it has banned the practice. |
||
|
Some of CHAI's rescued and rehabilitated horses |
||
|
November 1999 CHAI sponsors the first conference in Israel on Animal Shelter Management for veterinarians responsible for municipal pounds, and for heads of shelters and their workers. The two-day event, held at the Koret Veterinary School, attracted an audience from all over the country. Because police officers or municipal veterinarians who were sent out in response to our calls about horse abuse had not received training in what to look for, CHAI included information about how to identify horse abuse in our Animal Shelter Management Manual, which was distributed in Hebrew and in English at the conference and later on our website in Arabic. The information about horses was subsequently distributed as a separate manual, in English, Hebrew, and Arabic: Horses Standards of Care and of their Work Environment. CHAI also urged the Veterinary Services to provide training to police and municipal veterinarians on this topic, and the first such class was finally held.
2001 CHAI's sister charity in Israel, Hakol Chai, reports a major abuser of horses in Jaffa, the old part of Tel Aviv, to authorities a man named Nissim, who starved and sold horses, provided no veterinary care, and even hacked them apart with an axe in front of each other and sold their meat in the market as beef. Hakol Chai's undercover video of the killings airs on TV, and Nissim's place is temporarily closed down.
Horse abuse in Jaffa exposed by Hakol Chai
2003
Nissim reopens his facility and Hakol Chai organizes a raid on his
place, exposing horrendous cruelty and shutting him down permanently.
Still, the city refuses to investigate the condition of other horses in the
city and remove those being abused from their abusers. Hakol Chai
determines that regulations will not stop the abuse and calls for a
complete ban. |
||
|
||
|
April 2005 Hakol Chai's attorney writes to the Ministry of
Transportation and Mayors of cities around Israel, urging them to ban the
practice of horses pulling heavy carts. Hakol Chai begins pressuring the
City Council to issue a ban. Hakol Chai's attorney submits a detailed
proposal and recommendations to the City Council, asking it to call a
meeting to discuss the problem and its recommendations. In response to
Hakol Chai's campaign, cart horse owners begin heavily lobbying the Mayor's
office to prevent the enactment of a ban, and the Mayor is reluctant to take
action against this special interest group.
December 2007 For the first time, as a result of Hakol Chai's campaign,
the Tel Aviv City Council calls a special session to address the problem of
horse abuse in the city. At that meeting, Tel Aviv's municipal
veterinarian agrees with Hakol Chai that abuse cannot be prevented through
regulations, especially since the city has neither the funds to regularly
inspect the horses nor a facility to house them if they remove them from
their abusers. Still, the Mayor refuses to ban the practice, saying he will
make greater efforts to enforce existing regulations.
At the entrance to City Hall
December 2008 350 people crowd into a popular Tel Aviv venue in support of Hakol Chai's campaign, where popular singers Asaf Amdurski, Ram Orion, and Billy Levi have volunteered to perform. CHAI / Hakol Chai's campaign in Israel is now part of an international coalition of organizations throughout the world called Horses Without Carriages International, which seeks to end horse-drawn carts and carriages.
Popular singer Asaf Amdurski
was among those who volunteered
June 2009 Hakol Chai stages a civil disobedience demonstration at the entrance to City Hall. Dozens of Hakol Chai protestors carrying signs saying "Horses and donkeys are not vehicles," "Animals are not cars," "Carriages and carts are a dead trend," "They're hurting; don't you care?" and "Stop Animal Abuse" block the entrance to Tel Aviv's City Hall to protest the Mayor's continued refusal to ban horse-drawn carts. The protesters distribute hundreds of pamphlets explaining the plight of the horses to pedestrians on one of the city's busiest streets, which runs in front of City Hall, and to city employees as they enter and exit the building. Some of the protesters lie on the ground as if they were dead to depict what becomes of the abused animals.
At the entrance to City Hall. Photo: Noa Magger
November 2009 Tel Aviv's Mayor, at long last, bans horse-drawn carts
from the city.
With your support, we are making a difference. Please continue to support CHAI's efforts on behalf of Israel's animals, in particular the development, publishing, and translation of our humane education curriculums for secular and religious schools.
Send your tax-deductible contributions to CHAI at
Yours for a more compassionate world,
CHAI - Concern for Helping Animals in Israel
Email:
chai_us@cox.net
|