British Equestrian Federation
presses government for wider issuing of passports to UK horses and
ponies
The British Equestrian Federation has proposed
to government that far wider distribution of passports to the UK horse and pony
population would benefit the equine industry.
The BEF was responding to a request from the
Ministry of Agriculture for views on how it should carry out an EC decision
aimed at preventing horses being slaughtered for human consumption which have
been administered with certain veterinary medicines in the previous six months
for which no Maximum Residual Level (MRL) has been set.
BEF supports the option suggested by MAFF
whereby all registered horses would have to be issued with a passport which
would have to include an additional section requiring owners to declare whether
the horse is ultimately intended for human consumption, and recording details
of veterinary medicines administered.
BEF further supports the MAFF proposal that
horses and ponies kept for breeding and production would be issued with
passports but at a later stage when the animal is moved from the premises where
it is kept, or within a year of birth, which ever is earlier.
MAFF has estimated that issuing up to 200,000
new passports could be involved for registered horses and ponies that currently
do not require one, at an average price of £5 per passport.
The Ministry estimates that a further 320,000
new passports would be required for horses and ponies kept for breeding and
production that currently do not have them.
The BEFs view is that severely limiting
the scope of passport issuing would leave large areas of the horse population
unmonitored, and therefore open to infringements of EC directives, with serious
consequences if harm should be transmitted from horses to humans through the
food chain,
BEF points out that there are major incremental
advantages to the British horse industry if much wider registration of the
countrys equine population is achieved through the EC legislation.
Wider registration would assist greatly in
reducing haphazard breeding of stock of little value. BEF agrees with equine
welfare organisations that wide registration would alleviate current welfare
problems associated with those horses and ponies of little commercial value
which suffer neglect and other forms of deprivation.
Whilst compulsory breeding programmes are out
of the question, BEF feels that far wider registration would additionally
assist efforts to raise standards of competition horse breeding where the UK is
lagging behind its European competitors who have embraced wide-spread
registration and grading of stock.
BEF appreciates that the cost of passport
issuing would be borne by horse and pony owners, but feels that the commitment
of paying £5 per animal is not inordinate when compared with the overall
cost of keeping a horse or pony properly.
BEF recommends that the registration process
should be handled by the British Horse Database which was set up to achieve the
above objectives in raising standards.
BEF made its response to MAFF through the
British Horse Industry Confederation, the body set up jointly with the racing
and Thoroughbred breeding sectors to speak to government with one voice on
behalf of the horse industry.
Michael Clayton, Chairman of the British Horse
Society and British Horse Industry Confederation, said: At their
invitation, BEF and British Horse Society representatives attended a meeting
with the British Equine Veterinary Association representatives on this issue.
Some vets present supported our view, but we note with disappointment that the
official BEVA line is to recommend the most limited of passport issuing,
largely they fear it would add to veterinary surgeons bureaucratic
burdens.
We pointed out that the use of
para-medics could greatly lessen veterinary involvement and costs to owners in
passport issuing. Better identification of individual animals will undoubtedly
be possible in future through the use of micro-chips, making the old fashioned
passport procedures involving drawings of horse markings more streamlined.
Technology improvements will undoubtedly make the passport issuing process far
more practicable.
We are pleased that BEVA officially
supports our view that wider registration of British horses and ponies is
essential in the overall interests of raising standards, although they do not
think this legislation is the way to achieve it.
The reality is that this is
probably the best chance of achieving this goal for a generation, and if the
minimalist view prevails the British horse industry will have lost a major
opportunity to gain a level footing with standards attained on the continent
where competition horse breeding is so much more profitable and successful.
Just a glance at the breeding of the winning placings in Olympic showjumping
and dressage supports this view.
For more information, contact:
Andrew Finding, Chief Executive BEF tel:
02476 698871
or Michael Clayton, Chairman BHIC tel:
01572 724424
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