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Analysis: Kosher meat ban can affect all of us

June 24, 2010 14:24

By

Henry Grunwald

1 min read

I suppose Neville Chamberlain might have described New Zealand as "a small, far-away country" but New Zealand's new animal welfare code could have a major effect on this side of the world.

The code requires animals slaughtered for commercial consumption to be stunned prior to slaughter to ensure they are treated "humanely and in accordance with good practice and scientific knowledge". Stunning disqualifies animals from being kosher and the code is an insult to shechitah, which is at least as humane as any other method of slaughter.

It succumbs to the popular myth that shechitah is painful, ignoring ample evidence to the contrary. The code, which breaches the NZ Bill of Rights Act, also ignores the suffering caused by mishaps in the stunning process - a matter recognised by animal welfare bodies but overlooked by New Zealand's Minister of Agriculture.

Shechita UK has been called on to assist, as has Lord Sacks. We will do all we can to provide religious and legal advice and scientific evidence. The risk of other Western democracies following New Zealand's example is real.