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Pigs in Geneva!
Thank you for participating in the Swine Flu campaign!
We stopped traffic in Geneva on May 27th as we descended on the World Health Organization (WHO) with a herd of cardboard pigs to deliver our petition!
The 225 cardboard pigs represented the 225,000 Avaaz members that had signed the petition.
We certainly got our message across -- our campaign delivery went out around the world on
ABC news, EFE TV, the Wall Street Journal, France 24, Kuwait News Agency, and Intellasia
- as well as many other major news outlets.
When we handed over our petition, it became apparent how important our campaigning was and how valid our concerns were. Initially, the World Health Organization's Food Safety and Zoonoses director, Dr. Jørgen Schlundt, told us that the WHO and the FAO had not found a definitive link between the H1N1 virus and a factory farm and that the source was still under investigation. But he then admitted:
1)
scientists have seen more disease breeding and mutating between animals and humans
with the massive increase in industrial meat production;
2) he agreed that certain
company's farming practices (Smithfields in this case) were dangerous
;
3) he warned that new operations propagating in developing countries could make 'mistakes' in food safety that could be seriously risky to human health; and most importantly
4) he indicated that
the political processes that determine the research and rules on factory farm biosafety are dominated by the industrial meat lobby.
He said strong global regulations were essential, but, to date, unless there is a huge scare like BSE and people die, scientists are unable to push through the laws needed to prevent animal borne pandemics.
The message was clear - our public campaigning for investigation and regulation of factory farms is vital
to ensure our food safety and counter the powerful meat industry. Our action showed the WHO that the world does not want to wait for another disaster - we want funding for scientists to investigate factory farms and we want preventive measures put in place that ensure public heath standards.
Click below to see the interview with Avaaz campaign director Alice Jay on Efe: