Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Lab monkeys 'scream with fear' in tests

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Lab monkeys 'scream with fear' in tests

 

Source >

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,1407818,00.html

 

Sandra Laville

Tuesday February 8, 2005

The Guardian

 

Secret documents describing how some monkeys can

scream in misery, fear and anger during experiments

were produced in the high court yesterday as evidence

that the laws intended to protect laboratory animals

are being flouted.

 

Excerpts from Cambridge University internal papers -

one of several sites where primate research is carried

out - give laboratory technicians and scientists

advice on how to deal with problems during and after

experiments. Presented in court by the British Union

for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV), they describe

occasions when primates are " screaming, trying to get

out of the box, defecating " , and state: " This is an

angry animal. "

 

Scientists and technicians are advised in the

documents to " punish " the bad habits of the monkeys,

stating that these bad habits include the normal

self-grooming.

 

Richard Drabble QC, for the BUAV, told the high court

yesterday that the documents contradict the general

public perception that animals are well cared for and

protected under the Animals (Scientific Procedures)

Act 1986.

 

Making an application for judicial review of the

legality of lab practices, he also alleged that

brain-damaged monkeys at Cambridge were not provided

with the 24-hour veterinary care which the

government's own guidance states is necessary.

 

David Thomas, the solicitor for BUAV, said: " Cambridge

staff work 9-5pm, so animals who had just been brain

damaged were left overnight without veterinary

attention.

 

" Some were found to be dead in the morning, some were

found to be in a worse condition. Yet there is an

obligation of licence holders to keep suffering to a

minimum. The whole system is very secretive and the

public does not get to see what is really going on. "

 

 

The court challenge comes after the government's chief

inspector of animals dismissed the findings of a

10-month undercover investigation by BUAV into three

research programmes at Cambridge in 1998. BUAV claimed

they discovered monkeys which had the tops of their

heads sawn off in order for a stroke to be induced and

were then left for 15 hours without veterinary

attention.

 

But the court heard that after reviewing the licence

to Cambridge for the three programmes, and some of the

other 4,000 testing licences granted in England and

Wales, the chief inspector of animals gave a clean

bill of health to all establishments.

 

For the home secretary, Jonathan Swift said the

application for a judicial review should be dismissed.

He said the chief inspector of animals had concluded

that the decisions taken each time the licences were

granted had been sound and the home secretary had

accepted these findings.

 

Mr Swift said the granting of licences was

case-specific and highly fact-sensitive. The home

secretary had to " weigh the likely adverse effects on

the animals concerned against the benefit likely to

accrue as a result of the programme " .

 

The three programmes Cambridge was carrying out

involved research into degenerative brain diseases

such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.

 

 

Special reports

Animal rights

Hunting

Foot and mouth disease

BSE crisis

What's wrong with our food?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Meet the all-new My - Try it today!

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Read Next of Kin, by Roger Fouts! Testing was done (NOT by Fouts!!!) on

chimpanzees who could communicate in American Sign Language!

 

Rick Stevens <ecology1st2004 wrote:

Lab monkeys 'scream with fear' in tests

 

Source >

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,1407818,00.html

 

Sandra Laville

Tuesday February 8, 2005

The Guardian

 

Secret documents describing how some monkeys can

scream in misery, fear and anger during experiments

were produced in the high court yesterday as evidence

that the laws intended to protect laboratory animals

are being flouted.

 

Excerpts from Cambridge University internal papers -

one of several sites where primate research is carried

out - give laboratory technicians and scientists

advice on how to deal with problems during and after

experiments. Presented in court by the British Union

for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV), they describe

occasions when primates are " screaming, trying to get

out of the box, defecating " , and state: " This is an

angry animal. "

 

Scientists and technicians are advised in the

documents to " punish " the bad habits of the monkeys,

stating that these bad habits include the normal

self-grooming.

 

Richard Drabble QC, for the BUAV, told the high court

yesterday that the documents contradict the general

public perception that animals are well cared for and

protected under the Animals (Scientific Procedures)

Act 1986.

 

Making an application for judicial review of the

legality of lab practices, he also alleged that

brain-damaged monkeys at Cambridge were not provided

with the 24-hour veterinary care which the

government's own guidance states is necessary.

 

David Thomas, the solicitor for BUAV, said: " Cambridge

staff work 9-5pm, so animals who had just been brain

damaged were left overnight without veterinary

attention.

 

" Some were found to be dead in the morning, some were

found to be in a worse condition. Yet there is an

obligation of licence holders to keep suffering to a

minimum. The whole system is very secretive and the

public does not get to see what is really going on. "

 

 

The court challenge comes after the government's chief

inspector of animals dismissed the findings of a

10-month undercover investigation by BUAV into three

research programmes at Cambridge in 1998. BUAV claimed

they discovered monkeys which had the tops of their

heads sawn off in order for a stroke to be induced and

were then left for 15 hours without veterinary

attention.

 

But the court heard that after reviewing the licence

to Cambridge for the three programmes, and some of the

other 4,000 testing licences granted in England and

Wales, the chief inspector of animals gave a clean

bill of health to all establishments.

 

For the home secretary, Jonathan Swift said the

application for a judicial review should be dismissed.

He said the chief inspector of animals had concluded

that the decisions taken each time the licences were

granted had been sound and the home secretary had

accepted these findings.

 

Mr Swift said the granting of licences was

case-specific and highly fact-sensitive. The home

secretary had to " weigh the likely adverse effects on

the animals concerned against the benefit likely to

accrue as a result of the programme " .

 

The three programmes Cambridge was carrying out

involved research into degenerative brain diseases

such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.

 

 

Special reports

Animal rights

Hunting

Foot and mouth disease

BSE crisis

What's wrong with our food?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Meet the all-new My - Try it today!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...