Tuesday 26 March 2013

Below the Avaaz.org petition text which is currently ongoing about a dreadful Pre-clinical Research Bill - which would legalise animal testing- that the Mauritian Government is thinking of implementing. Please sign and share this petition widely. There is absolutely no excuse in this day and age to experiments on animals. As a Mauritian, I say a NO! to experiments on animal in Mauritius, and my vote will certainly NEVER go to those people who disregard the people's outcry against such atrocious cruelty. As of this date, the petition has gathered about 905 signatures, and I hope it keeps gathering more and more supporters. Come on people, voice out for animals! They are no different than children. Just because they do not express their suffering in human words does not mean they do not cry in pain, distress and immense fear. DO NOT EVER LET THIS BILL GO THROUGH! Please SAY NO! TO ANIMAL EXPERIMENTS IN MAURITIUS!

Here is a link to the petition: http://petition.avaaz.org/en/petition/Say_No_to_Animal_Experiments_in_Mauritius

"Say No! to Animal Experiments in Mauritius!


https://www.facebook.com/SayNoToAnimalExperimentsInMauritius

Mauritius is preparing to implement a Pre-Clinical Research Bill which will most likely involve the legalizing of experiments and tests on animals. We say a resounding NO to that!

Cruel, outdated, and invasive experiments on animals are no longer needed in this day and age. While we, in no manner, are against preclinical research, we fiercely denounce the use of animals in these researches. Animals are sentient creatures with complex nervous systems similar to humans. Evolving scientific understanding acknowledges animals to have substantial social and physiological needs seldom met under laboratory conditions. We advocate that proven more effective, non-animal techniques that yield both ethical and technological advantages are used instead.

We, therefore, strongly urge the Mauritian government to look into preclinical alternatives to the use of animals for biomedical research. Superior non-animal alternatives to research concerned with toxicity testing, endocrine disruptors, carcinogenicity, eye and skin irritation, dermal penetration testing and countless others have already been tried and approved by the European Reference Laboratory On Alternatives To Animal Testing (EURL ECVAM) and the Interagency Coordinating Committee on the Validation of Alternative Methods (ICCVAM). Non-animal techniques in research are also backed by renowned organisations such as the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine.

These cruelty-free, ethical and more reliable non-animal alternatives include: computational based methodologies (in silico), in vitro testing using cell and tissue cultures, epidemiology, clinical studies on patients, and other non-animal methods such as pathological investigations (autopsies and biopsies) which are assuredly going to yield more precise results than painful and unnecessary animal testing.
Experiments and testing on animals do not belong to this era and, as responsible citizens of this world, it is our duty to continually develop alternatives to methods that generally impose immense stress, fear and suffering on our animal counterparts.

Indeed, the European Union is moving towards a ban on the marketing of cosmetics with ingredients tested on animals by 2013. This highlights the longstanding unethical aspect of using animals and the worldwide movement away from animal experimentation when non-animal methodologies abound. Both human and animal kind will be better off if cruelty-free methods are chosen rather than subjecting animals to atrocious and, very much avoidable, pain.

Mauritius is a country which can greatly benefit from the findings of distinguished international agencies and thus avoid duplicative testing altogether. There is absolutely no need to indulge in animal experimentation. Moreover, grants and other financial gain will be confined to conglomerates such as the ones already deriving profit from the much frowned upon monkeys breeding and export business. The general population of Mauritius will not gain anything from a cruel and unjustified legislation allowing animal experiments and testing.

A better solution is investing in non-animal biomedical research and studies which will not only boost the country’s image, but put us in the limelight as a country which dares to embrace animal welfare and take a step forward to show to the world that we are beyond subjecting our animals to unneeded cruelty when viable, cruelty-free methods exist and can be further developed.

It is our heartfelt appeal that plans to legalize animal experimentation and testing are immediately dropped and that ethical non-animal research alternatives be implemented."

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