ECEAE Accuses European Ministers of Misleading the Public Over Animal Experiments Law

By Eceae european Coalition To End Animal Experiments, PRNE
Wednesday, May 12, 2010

LONDON, May 13, 2010 - London: The ECEAE (European Coalition to End Animal
Experiments), a coalition of animal protection groups across the EU, is
accusing European ministers of seriously misleading the public over a new law
about animal experiments. The current law, Directive 86/609, is being
revised.

The Council of Ministers has made several inaccurate claims:

    - Animal experiments will have to be replaced wherever possible, with
      numbers and suffering reduced to a minimum. In fact, this is nothing
      new - it is already the law. Worse, the new law would allow animals to
      be used even where there is an adequate replacement if the replacement
      is not listed in European legislation. Based on EU statistics, this
      would account for around 78% of all experiments (including for basic
      research).

    - Use of primates will be subject to tight restrictions. This is untrue.
      Although there are restrictions on the use of great apes, researchers
      will be able to use other primates even for minor human ailments, and
      in basic research without any special protection at all.

    - Only the offspring of primates bred in captivity or sourced from
      self-sustaining colonies can be used. This is untrue; merely a long-
      term aspiration, contingent on researchers' supply needs.

    - Claims that the new directive is a step towards the ultimate goal of
      achieving the full replacement of experiments on animals when
      scientifically possible are disingenuous. The Council position contains
      no mechanisms for achieving this goal. Ministers have rejected the use
      of targets and frequent reviews to reflect public opinion and evolving
      science.

Despite all the rhetoric, the truth is that animals will continue to be
experimented on, in large numbers, for reasons which have nothing to do with
finding cures for diseases - such as the "safety" testing of non-essential
products and curiosity-driven research.

ECEAE Chief Executive, Michelle Thew: "The rhetoric just does not match
the reality. There is a huge gap between the impression given by the EC of
what will happen and the reality for the millions of animals who will
continue to suffer and die in European laboratories. We are extremely
disappointed that an opportunity to improve animal welfare and place greater
restrictions on animal experimentation has so far been lost. The battle will
now go back to the European Parliament."

Contact: Sarah Kite at sarah.kite@buav.org or +44-(0)207-700-4888

www.eceae.org/

Sarah Kite at sarah.kite at buav.org or +44-(0)207-700-4888

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