The Great Canadian Horse Meat Scandal – A Political Affair (Part 1)
May 14, 2014 was a lamentable day for horse advocates on both sides of the Canadian-American border. An opportunity to effectively shutter the horse slaughter industry was lost due to a stubborn and unrelenting political party whose members blindly accept their leader’s dictatorial rule without reflection on what ill-effects the outcome has on humans and animals alike.
A Big Brother nation of fools – mindless robots adhering to political policy out of fear, greed and the despicable disregard for food safety. Clearly this was an unashamed demonstration of a non-democratic movement to safeguard their over-inflated salaries, the comfort of ludicrous benefits and ever-growing monopoly of money over basic principles that govern decency, goodwill and stewardship of morality. Ignorance is blissfully ignorant, at any cost.
Bill C-571, a Private Members food safety bill and successor to Bill C-322, was defeated by Canadian Parliament by a margin of 102 yeas (40%) to 155 nays (60%).
BC Southern Interior MP Alex Atamanenko introduced Bill C-571 to the House of Commons earlier this year when it became apparent that Bill C-322 would not have sufficient parliamentary support to survive the second reading as a result of the negative impacts it would have on trade. In other words entirely political in nature and exclusive of accountability for animal welfare or food safety.
While the goal of Bill-322 was to prohibit the importation or exportation of horses and horse meat products for human consumption, the premise of Bill C-571 targets food safety which, in theory, should not impact trade.
“This enactment amends the Meat Inspection Act and the Safe Food for Canadians Act to prohibit the sending or conveying from one province to another — or the importing or exporting — of horses or other equines for slaughter for human consumption or the production of meat products for human consumption. It also provides for an exception to that prohibition.” [1]
What this “exception” implies is that the only way a horse or other equine can enter the food chain is if he/she were raised for that express purpose. To avoid loopholes in the system an accompanying prerequisite involves the submission of a medical record containing a standardized description of the horse together with a complete lifetime record, in chronological order, of all medical treatments received.
Fundamentally this is equivalent to the EU equine passport structure where strict enforcement of a passport system is in effect. Moreover, the EU system, which has been in place since 1996, requires mandatory micro-chipping that further reinforces the system as a measure to preclude passport forgeries. That said, the stringency of the EU system is decidedly questionable, but nonetheless serves as a model to facilitate the segregation of ineligible horses thereby excluding them from the food chain.
WHY BILL C-571
It has long been known that there are serious flaws in the Canadian (and Mexican) horse slaughter industry. Flaws which permit the export of unsafe meat products to countries that consume horse meat as part of a regular diet. The majority of these countries belong to the EU where stringent (take that with a grain of salt) regulations are in place to prevent prohibited drugs from entering the food chain. For the most part, the EU responds by turning a blind eye. This has been going on for years.
Following extensive lobbying initiated by the International Fund for Horses (now The Horse Fund), later joined by European food safety activists, in 2010 the EU issued sanctions requiring the quarantine of horses intended for human consumption who had been administered a laundry list of prohibited substances. The most common among these drugs are phenybutazone and clenbuterol. [2]
To comply with EU regulations, effective July 2010 (finally coming into effect on July 31, 2013), the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) required all slaughter-bound horses to have a passport referred to as the Equine Identification Document (EID). Unlike the stricter version of a passport required by the EU, the EID simply calls for “a standardized description of the animal, as well as a comprehensive record of the equine’s medical treatment for at least the preceding six months.” [3] Laughably, despite the serious nature of it all, there is no proof required for this sad excuse for a passport.
What a joke it all is as evidenced by the findings described below.
To start, in 2011:
“In May of 2011 a report was released by the European Commission Food and Veterinary Office (FVO) regarding inspections of EU regulated plants in Mexico slaughtering horses for human consumption during the latter part of 2010.
‘. . . . a number of serious infractions and actions taken were cited. Some of these violations that failed to meet EU regulations included; hygiene and water quality provided for the horses, non-traceable carcasses some of which were in contact with EU eligible horse meat, presence of EU prohibited drug residues, falsified sworn statements regarding veterinary medical treatment histories including cases of positive results for EU prohibited drug residues.’ ” [4]
Then in July 2012, the European Commission’s RASFF (Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed) reports:
“the unauthorised substances clenbuterol (0.0023 mg/kg – ppm) and phenylbutazone (0.0013; 0.0015; 0.0010 mg/kg – ppm) in chilled deboned horse meat and frozen deboned horse meat from Canada”
were found during routine testing. [5]
These are not isolated cases.
As a result of lax enforcement, effective July 2013, the EU demanded that all horses slaughtered for human consumption at EU-certified plants in countries that export horse meat to Europe must have a veterinary record listing all medications they have been given during their lifetime. Lifetime? Why then does the EID only require “at least” 6-months?
Nothing has changed, absolutely nothing.
It is no secret that horses are not regarded as food sources here in North America and are therefore not regulated like other “livestock” in regard to medications administered over their lifetime.
Horses bound for slaughter have often changed hands many times over and are gathered from random sources at various stages in their life – there is unquestionably no system in place here in North America that tracks medications and veterinary treatments administered to them to ensure compliance with this broken system.
Moreover, one need only look at the EU and Canadian regulations for prohibited drugs – not just drugs with 6-month withdrawal times but rather drugs that are categorically not permitted for use in horses slaughtered for food – ever. The list is long and many of these drugs are given to horses on a regular basis in both Canada and the US, particularly those in the racing industry, many of whom make their way to the slaughterhouse. [6]
Phenybutazone, clenbuterol, estradiaol, nitrofurazone, boldenone, ventipulmin – the list goes on.
These drugs are prohibited for a reason, yet in all likelihood over 98% of the horses that enter the slaughter pipeline have been administered at least one on the list. Obviously there is no such thing as zero tolerance when it comes to the CFIA. The CFIA is in absolute denial as are all other others who support the horse slaughter industry.
For example:
Phenylbutazone (PBZ)
“In horses, phenylbutazone is metabolized in the liver where it is converted to oxyphenbutazone, c-hydroxyphenylbutazone and probably c-hydroxy-phenbutazone and follows a bi-exponential model of decay.” [7]
In other words since the kinetics and drug activity of phenylbutazone and its metabolites (e.g. oxyphenbutazone) are characteristic of a bi-exponential decay rate (the sum of two single exponential decays), in theory, regardless of the elapsed time there will always be residuals present in blood plasma (i.e. the concept of infinite division).
“Oxyphenbutazone has NSAID properties and at one time was thought to be less toxic than PBZ. However, oxyphenbutazone also has serious adverse effects in humans including those of producing aplastic anemia, agranulocytosis, thrombocytopenia, leucopenia, pancytopenia and hemolytic anemia.
The mortality rate of PBZ- and oxytphenbutazone-induced aplastic anemia was 94% and 71% respectively. Overall, the data suggests that the risk for development of the lethal adverse effects in humans by PBZ and oxytphenbutazone are not always dose-dependent indicating an idiosyncratic effect. In addition to its well-known bone marrow suppression effects, PBZ is also associated with a hypersensitivity reaction in the liver which can cause death.The lack of oversight to prevent horses given PBZ from being sent to slaughter for human consumption as ordered by the FDA indicates a serious gap in food safety and constitutes a significant public health risk.” [8]
Clenbuterol
“According to studies done by the Agricultural Research Service, consumption of meat from veal calves exposed to clenbuterol can poison humans. Also recent studies by the ARS suggest that residues in edible tissues in swine exposed to clenbuterol remain high after slaughter, despite a withdrawal period from the drug. Their research has shown that even after a seven-day withdrawal period, the residues of the drug still exceeded European maximum residue levels. In conclusion, clenbuterol use in swine and other livestock was determined to be inconsistent with human consumption standards.” [9]
Nitrofurazone
“The use of all nitrofurans, with the exception of furazolidone was banned in the EU in 1993. The ban was introduced because of concerns over the carcinogenicity of these compounds. Two years later, the ban was extended to cover furazolidone. Again, the reasons for the ban were the carcinogenicity of the parent drug, the extensive metabolism of furazolidone and the lack of information concerning the safety of its metabolites. Since then, it has been forbidden to use any nitrofuran in any food-producing animal within the EU, or in any animal destined for export into the EU.” [10]
All three of these drugs are prohibited from ever entering the food chain yet the CFIA states that a horse’s medical history must only show that he/she has not received these drugs “within six months of slaughter” for human food. In any case the truth of it is these EIDs depend solely on the honor system and are routinely falsified.
“They skirt the core issue: that most horses slaughtered in Canada have received drugs that disqualify them from the human food chain. They would rather talk about not finding toxic residues in a situation where residue testing is not even applicable.
Let me quote world experts: ‘It is not possible to establish a lower limit of toxicity for Phenylbutazone’, according to the European Medicines Agency and European Food Safety Authority, April 2013. What part of that is so hard to understand? Horse slaughter is very much a human health, food safety, and liability issue.” [11]
The CFIA even goes so far as to refuse to say whether drug-tainted horse meat has entered the food chain.
“Backstreet Bully was unloaded from a trailer after dawn and led by his halter into an abattoir in rural Quebec. Once owned and raced by Magna’s Frank Stronach, the chestnut thoroughbred was to be slaughtered then packaged for human food.
That same January morning earlier this year, frantic phone calls from the Stronach group tried to save Backstreet Bully’s life — and protect the public from eating toxic meat.
The Star obtained Backstreet Bully’s veterinary records from when he was under Stronach’s care, which show that in addition to bute and nitrofurazone, he had been given numerous other risky substances, such as the anabolic steroid stanozolol.
Most problematic, though, were the 21 applications of nitrofurazone, a topical ointment used to treat skin infections. In Europe, nitrofurazone was banned for use in food-producing animals in 1995 because it was linked to cancer in humans.
Canadian officials gave a conflicting and confusing response about nitrofurazone: the drug cannot ever be administered to a horse that will be eaten by humans, but the horse’s medical history must only show it has not had the drug for six months before it is slaughtered.What happened to Backstreet Bully’s carcass is a closely guarded secret. Neither the government nor the slaughterhouse owner will say whether the horse’s meat became someone’s dinner somewhere in the world.” [12]
Clearly guilty as charged.
Moreover the greater majority of horses slaughtered in Canadian abattoirs are sourced from the United States; in 2013 of the 71,961 horses slaughtered here, 45,547 or approximately 63% were transported across the Canadian-US border to one of five federally regulated horse slaughter facilities in Canada. [13] Sadly over twice this number of US horses (102,254) met their grisly fate in Mexico.
But the EU does not permit US horsemeat exports.
“The Commission is aware of the possible uses of substances in horses which are prohibited in the EU. However, the USA is not authorized to export horse meat to the EU as there is no US official control programme for residues of veterinary drugs approved by the EU.”
Yet the European Commission has failed to stem the tide of horsemeat that makes its way into Canada and Mexico – a decidedly convenient loophole for the horse meat industry and those amoralistic countries involved.
To thwart these accusations and defend their deceitful practices the CFIA consistently gives the same tired response. Here are some excerpts from a letter I received from Colleen Barnes, Executive Director, Domestic Food Safety Systems and Meat Hygiene Directorate (Canada).
“The six month time period is considered sufficient since it allows a generous window of opportunity for an animal to naturally eliminate remnants of medication that may have been previously administered.”
What about all those drugs that are prohibited from ever entering the food chain regardless of withdrawal times? Or for that matter the falsified EIDs and the fact that many horses, particularly race horses, will have had medications administered within a few days of being slaughtered – there is no shortage of evidence to prove that “stable to table in less than seven days” is a sad reality of the horse slaughter industry.
And then in the same breath:
“In the case of drugs where the maximum residue limit is zero, such as phenylbutazone, should any trace of the drug be detected during testing, a risk assessment would be conducted by either CFIA or Health Canada and corrective action would be determined on a case by case basis.”
Incredible – she doesn’t even seem to understand the phrase “prohibited from ever entering the food chain” – phenylbutazone under no circumstances is permitted in any food animal. In point of fact she is confirming that the CFIA is breaking the law.
continue to read here
A Big Brother nation of fools – mindless robots adhering to political policy out of fear, greed and the despicable disregard for food safety. Clearly this was an unashamed demonstration of a non-democratic movement to safeguard their over-inflated salaries, the comfort of ludicrous benefits and ever-growing monopoly of money over basic principles that govern decency, goodwill and stewardship of morality. Ignorance is blissfully ignorant, at any cost.
Bill C-571, a Private Members food safety bill and successor to Bill C-322, was defeated by Canadian Parliament by a margin of 102 yeas (40%) to 155 nays (60%).
BC Southern Interior MP Alex Atamanenko introduced Bill C-571 to the House of Commons earlier this year when it became apparent that Bill C-322 would not have sufficient parliamentary support to survive the second reading as a result of the negative impacts it would have on trade. In other words entirely political in nature and exclusive of accountability for animal welfare or food safety.
While the goal of Bill-322 was to prohibit the importation or exportation of horses and horse meat products for human consumption, the premise of Bill C-571 targets food safety which, in theory, should not impact trade.
“This enactment amends the Meat Inspection Act and the Safe Food for Canadians Act to prohibit the sending or conveying from one province to another — or the importing or exporting — of horses or other equines for slaughter for human consumption or the production of meat products for human consumption. It also provides for an exception to that prohibition.” [1]
What this “exception” implies is that the only way a horse or other equine can enter the food chain is if he/she were raised for that express purpose. To avoid loopholes in the system an accompanying prerequisite involves the submission of a medical record containing a standardized description of the horse together with a complete lifetime record, in chronological order, of all medical treatments received.
Fundamentally this is equivalent to the EU equine passport structure where strict enforcement of a passport system is in effect. Moreover, the EU system, which has been in place since 1996, requires mandatory micro-chipping that further reinforces the system as a measure to preclude passport forgeries. That said, the stringency of the EU system is decidedly questionable, but nonetheless serves as a model to facilitate the segregation of ineligible horses thereby excluding them from the food chain.
WHY BILL C-571
It has long been known that there are serious flaws in the Canadian (and Mexican) horse slaughter industry. Flaws which permit the export of unsafe meat products to countries that consume horse meat as part of a regular diet. The majority of these countries belong to the EU where stringent (take that with a grain of salt) regulations are in place to prevent prohibited drugs from entering the food chain. For the most part, the EU responds by turning a blind eye. This has been going on for years.
Following extensive lobbying initiated by the International Fund for Horses (now The Horse Fund), later joined by European food safety activists, in 2010 the EU issued sanctions requiring the quarantine of horses intended for human consumption who had been administered a laundry list of prohibited substances. The most common among these drugs are phenybutazone and clenbuterol. [2]
To comply with EU regulations, effective July 2010 (finally coming into effect on July 31, 2013), the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) required all slaughter-bound horses to have a passport referred to as the Equine Identification Document (EID). Unlike the stricter version of a passport required by the EU, the EID simply calls for “a standardized description of the animal, as well as a comprehensive record of the equine’s medical treatment for at least the preceding six months.” [3] Laughably, despite the serious nature of it all, there is no proof required for this sad excuse for a passport.
What a joke it all is as evidenced by the findings described below.
To start, in 2011:
“In May of 2011 a report was released by the European Commission Food and Veterinary Office (FVO) regarding inspections of EU regulated plants in Mexico slaughtering horses for human consumption during the latter part of 2010.
- ‘. . . . a number of serious infractions and actions taken were cited. Some of these violations that failed to meet EU regulations included; hygiene and water quality provided for the horses, non-traceable carcasses some of which were in contact with EU eligible horse meat, presence of EU prohibited drug residues, falsified sworn statements regarding veterinary medical treatment histories including cases of positive results for EU prohibited drug residues.’ ” [4]
“the unauthorised substances clenbuterol (0.0023 mg/kg – ppm) and phenylbutazone (0.0013; 0.0015; 0.0010 mg/kg – ppm) in chilled deboned horse meat and frozen deboned horse meat from Canada”
were found during routine testing. [5]
These are not isolated cases.
As a result of lax enforcement, effective July 2013, the EU demanded that all horses slaughtered for human consumption at EU-certified plants in countries that export horse meat to Europe must have a veterinary record listing all medications they have been given during their lifetime. Lifetime? Why then does the EID only require “at least” 6-months?
Nothing has changed, absolutely nothing.
It is no secret that horses are not regarded as food sources here in North America and are therefore not regulated like other “livestock” in regard to medications administered over their lifetime.
Horses bound for slaughter have often changed hands many times over and are gathered from random sources at various stages in their life – there is unquestionably no system in place here in North America that tracks medications and veterinary treatments administered to them to ensure compliance with this broken system.
Moreover, one need only look at the EU and Canadian regulations for prohibited drugs – not just drugs with 6-month withdrawal times but rather drugs that are categorically not permitted for use in horses slaughtered for food – ever. The list is long and many of these drugs are given to horses on a regular basis in both Canada and the US, particularly those in the racing industry, many of whom make their way to the slaughterhouse. [6]
Phenybutazone, clenbuterol, estradiaol, nitrofurazone, boldenone, ventipulmin – the list goes on.
These drugs are prohibited for a reason, yet in all likelihood over 98% of the horses that enter the slaughter pipeline have been administered at least one on the list. Obviously there is no such thing as zero tolerance when it comes to the CFIA. The CFIA is in absolute denial as are all other others who support the horse slaughter industry.
For example:
Phenylbutazone (PBZ)
“In horses, phenylbutazone is metabolized in the liver where it is converted to oxyphenbutazone, c-hydroxyphenylbutazone and probably c-hydroxy-phenbutazone and follows a bi-exponential model of decay.” [7]
In other words since the kinetics and drug activity of phenylbutazone and its metabolites (e.g. oxyphenbutazone) are characteristic of a bi-exponential decay rate (the sum of two single exponential decays), in theory, regardless of the elapsed time there will always be residuals present in blood plasma (i.e. the concept of infinite division).
“Oxyphenbutazone has NSAID properties and at one time was thought to be less toxic than PBZ. However, oxyphenbutazone also has serious adverse effects in humans including those of producing aplastic anemia, agranulocytosis, thrombocytopenia, leucopenia, pancytopenia and hemolytic anemia.
The mortality rate of PBZ- and oxytphenbutazone-induced aplastic anemia was 94% and 71% respectively. Overall, the data suggests that the risk for development of the lethal adverse effects in humans by PBZ and oxytphenbutazone are not always dose-dependent indicating an idiosyncratic effect. In addition to its well-known bone marrow suppression effects, PBZ is also associated with a hypersensitivity reaction in the liver which can cause death.The lack of oversight to prevent horses given PBZ from being sent to slaughter for human consumption as ordered by the FDA indicates a serious gap in food safety and constitutes a significant public health risk.” [8]
Clenbuterol
“According to studies done by the Agricultural Research Service, consumption of meat from veal calves exposed to clenbuterol can poison humans. Also recent studies by the ARS suggest that residues in edible tissues in swine exposed to clenbuterol remain high after slaughter, despite a withdrawal period from the drug. Their research has shown that even after a seven-day withdrawal period, the residues of the drug still exceeded European maximum residue levels. In conclusion, clenbuterol use in swine and other livestock was determined to be inconsistent with human consumption standards.” [9]
Nitrofurazone
“The use of all nitrofurans, with the exception of furazolidone was banned in the EU in 1993. The ban was introduced because of concerns over the carcinogenicity of these compounds. Two years later, the ban was extended to cover furazolidone. Again, the reasons for the ban were the carcinogenicity of the parent drug, the extensive metabolism of furazolidone and the lack of information concerning the safety of its metabolites. Since then, it has been forbidden to use any nitrofuran in any food-producing animal within the EU, or in any animal destined for export into the EU.” [10]
All three of these drugs are prohibited from ever entering the food chain yet the CFIA states that a horse’s medical history must only show that he/she has not received these drugs “within six months of slaughter” for human food. In any case the truth of it is these EIDs depend solely on the honor system and are routinely falsified.
“They skirt the core issue: that most horses slaughtered in Canada have received drugs that disqualify them from the human food chain. They would rather talk about not finding toxic residues in a situation where residue testing is not even applicable.
Let me quote world experts: ‘It is not possible to establish a lower limit of toxicity for Phenylbutazone’, according to the European Medicines Agency and European Food Safety Authority, April 2013. What part of that is so hard to understand? Horse slaughter is very much a human health, food safety, and liability issue.” [11]
The CFIA even goes so far as to refuse to say whether drug-tainted horse meat has entered the food chain.
“Backstreet Bully was unloaded from a trailer after dawn and led by his halter into an abattoir in rural Quebec. Once owned and raced by Magna’s Frank Stronach, the chestnut thoroughbred was to be slaughtered then packaged for human food.
That same January morning earlier this year, frantic phone calls from the Stronach group tried to save Backstreet Bully’s life — and protect the public from eating toxic meat.
The Star obtained Backstreet Bully’s veterinary records from when he was under Stronach’s care, which show that in addition to bute and nitrofurazone, he had been given numerous other risky substances, such as the anabolic steroid stanozolol.
Most problematic, though, were the 21 applications of nitrofurazone, a topical ointment used to treat skin infections. In Europe, nitrofurazone was banned for use in food-producing animals in 1995 because it was linked to cancer in humans.
Canadian officials gave a conflicting and confusing response about nitrofurazone: the drug cannot ever be administered to a horse that will be eaten by humans, but the horse’s medical history must only show it has not had the drug for six months before it is slaughtered.What happened to Backstreet Bully’s carcass is a closely guarded secret. Neither the government nor the slaughterhouse owner will say whether the horse’s meat became someone’s dinner somewhere in the world.” [12]
Clearly guilty as charged.
Moreover the greater majority of horses slaughtered in Canadian abattoirs are sourced from the United States; in 2013 of the 71,961 horses slaughtered here, 45,547 or approximately 63% were transported across the Canadian-US border to one of five federally regulated horse slaughter facilities in Canada. [13] Sadly over twice this number of US horses (102,254) met their grisly fate in Mexico.
But the EU does not permit US horsemeat exports.
“The Commission is aware of the possible uses of substances in horses which are prohibited in the EU. However, the USA is not authorized to export horse meat to the EU as there is no US official control programme for residues of veterinary drugs approved by the EU.”
Yet the European Commission has failed to stem the tide of horsemeat that makes its way into Canada and Mexico – a decidedly convenient loophole for the horse meat industry and those amoralistic countries involved.
To thwart these accusations and defend their deceitful practices the CFIA consistently gives the same tired response. Here are some excerpts from a letter I received from Colleen Barnes, Executive Director, Domestic Food Safety Systems and Meat Hygiene Directorate (Canada).
“The six month time period is considered sufficient since it allows a generous window of opportunity for an animal to naturally eliminate remnants of medication that may have been previously administered.”
What about all those drugs that are prohibited from ever entering the food chain regardless of withdrawal times? Or for that matter the falsified EIDs and the fact that many horses, particularly race horses, will have had medications administered within a few days of being slaughtered – there is no shortage of evidence to prove that “stable to table in less than seven days” is a sad reality of the horse slaughter industry.
And then in the same breath:
“In the case of drugs where the maximum residue limit is zero, such as phenylbutazone, should any trace of the drug be detected during testing, a risk assessment would be conducted by either CFIA or Health Canada and corrective action would be determined on a case by case basis.”
Incredible – she doesn’t even seem to understand the phrase “prohibited from ever entering the food chain” – phenylbutazone under no circumstances is permitted in any food animal. In point of fact she is confirming that the CFIA is breaking the law.
continue to read here
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