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Sentient Media Article /Jo-Anne McArthur/We Animals
Protests erupted in Brazil after a dog was killed inside a supermarket. The image of a stray dog side-by-side with the trail of blood left in the aisles of the Carrefour in Osasco, Brazil surfaced last week after a security guard savagely beat the animal to death. Both the dead dog and security guard have been removed from the premises, out of sight and out of mind like the rest of the animals suffering to stock Carrefour’s shelves.
One report claims the security guard killed the dog by trampling, grossly inaccurate by first glance at the photo evidence.
It shows blood splatter four feet wide. Paw marks can be seen in large
puddles of blood, marked with a Caution: Wet Floor sign, as if the dog
walked backward, trying to face the attacker. Eyewitnesses claim
security beat the dog with a stick after offering it cheese filled with
rat poison. Local authorities opened an investigation into the cause of
death on Monday.
According to reports on Facebook,
management told Carrefour security to “cleanse” the store before the
arrival of some higher-ups at the company. It’s likely the dog, who grew
comfortable in the store after employees set out food and water, met
his fate from someone he trusted.
Animal protection in Brazil
According to Article 32 of Brazil’s Environmental Crimes Law,
it is illegal to abuse, injure, or maim livestock, wild, native, or
exotic animals. Offenders can face up to a year in prison. The dead dog
will be considered a wild animal by law, living on the streets of Osasco
before taking refuge in the Carrefour.
But wild animals represent a very small portion of the animals
covered under Article 32. Brazil produces more than 250 million
livestock animals every year, and every single one of them suffers at
the hands of farmers. Then they are killed for food and sold at
supermarkets like Carrefour.
With more than 12,300 stores in 33 countries, Carrefour serves 105 million households worldwide. The average person eats about 75 pounds of meat annually. In the United States and Brazil, this number more than doubles to 222 pounds and 172 pounds, respectively. Carrefour’s 105 million households consume 7.9 billion pounds of meat every year.
Note: That holds true for 105 million households with one person.
Frankly, 7.9 billion is an extraordinarily conservative estimate. For
one or more person households, Carrefour is responsible for distributing
a sizable chunk of more than 16 billion pounds of slaughtered animal
meat every year.
Last year, investigators caught Carrefour selling dog meat
In 2012, Carrefour pledged to end the sale of dog meat. But four
short years later, investigators from Animals Asia found dog meat on the
shelves at a store in Xuzhou, China. Selling dog meat is not illegal in
China. Don’t let that fool you. Dog meat products like the Fankuai turtle-juiced dog meat found at two Carrefour stores in 2016 is a threat to animal welfare—and the safety of Carrefour consumers.
The list price of Fankuai turtle-juiced dog meat is approximately
$20. The main ingredient is dog meat, advertised by Carrefour as a
“Local Specialty.”
Since the Animals Asia investigation, Carrefour removed the specific dog meat products from their shelves but made no attempt to ban dog meat sales indefinitely. Dog meat was back on sale at Carrefour as recently as May 2017.
Obviously, dog meat is a very small portion of the meat sold by
Carrefour. It does, however, represent some of the most inhumane.
Dog meat is not traceable. Many dogs are pets or strays, making it
impossible for food processors and sellers to guarantee that the meat is
safe to eat. The dog meat trade is disturbingly characterized by the
use of cyanide-dipped arrows to kill dogs. This barbaric practice allows
trace amounts of cyanamide to enter the food chain, according to Jill
Robinson, founder of Animals Asia.
Carrefour’s savage treatment of a stray dog last week in Brazil and
history of dog meat sales in China is indicative of a supermarket chain
completely inept at its animal welfare policy. Man’s best friend is not safe inside Carrefour stores.
Carrefour’s animal welfare policy
Carrefour makes it clear that they support animal welfare—in text,
that is. They promise animal protection progress plans—“from birth right
through to slaughterhouse”—none of which have surfaced yet. Nor will
these plans in the least bit protect animals, but that goes without
saying. Millions of animals are suffering to put meat on the shelves at
Carrefour. There, I said it.
It’s moronic to try to protect animals from suffering if a. animals
are raised for slaughter and sold in your store and b. if even stray
animals are poisoned and beaten to death by store employees.
On its website, the food retailer commits to:
- entering into construction dialogue with producers and animal rights organizations
- recognizing products which adopt a positive approach to animal welfare
- helping train everyone involved in the production line: livestock farmers, slaughterhouse workers, shipper, and butchers
- informing consumers about the added value of products made with animal welfare in mind
Apparently, constructive dialogue means lying to consumers about
ending the sale of dog meat, the product with the least positive
approach to animal welfare. It’s also completely unrealistic to help
train everyone in the production line. That’s like the Oprah promising
every Carrefour consumer a car. Carrefour does not have enough resources
to retrain the third-party producers stocking its shelves according to
its standards. Neither party is ready to do so, anyway.
There is some value informing consumers about products made with animal welfare in mind. But shouldn’t all products have animal welfare in mind?
It sounds like Carrefour is saying, “Well, yaknow, you got your dog
meat, and you got your grass-fed beef… We really like our grass-fed
beef.” Then why on earth are you selling dog meat.
Out of sight, out of mind
Animal suffering bloodies the company’s reputation, whether it
happens in stores or in slaughterhouses. But sadly, that won’t phase
Carrefour executives. One dead dog is nothing compared to sales in the
world’s fifth most meat-hungry country.
Out of sight, out of mind. The unspoken narrative of the industrial food system keeps millions of livestock animals hidden from you and me. Animal suffering on this scale should
tell a different story. But corporate interests shut investigators out
of farms. They push widespread, systemic problems with animal welfare
further down the production line, waiting for someone else to tell them
their methods are unfit. The consequence is exactly what’s taking place
inside Carrefour supermarkets around the world.
The industrial food system feeds us more than food. It feeds us lies.
Carrefour’s approach to animal welfare is a perfect example. Everything
is true for Carrefour, and nothing is true for animals. Like they say,
out of sight, out of mind.
The hand that feeds is the same hand that closes the door on animal suffering.
Millions of animals suffering to stock supermarket shelves might be out
of sight, but only you have to power to put them out of mind. The fight
for animals has to start here, where inaction ends. Where it becomes
action. Where animal suffering can be seen in the light of day, like the
stray dog.
Carrefour RESPECT LIFE, take care of animals and treat them mercifully.
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