In the House of Lords today, asked whether a recent trade
deal to supply 50,000 lambs killed without stunning to Saudi Arabia
was consistent with the government's commitment to maintain animal
welfare standards after Brexit. He called on the government to halt
exports of halal meat until animal welfare and farming
organisations, regulatory authorities and UK halal authorities had
reached agreement to follow procedures similar to the New Zealand
model. Farmers could then export with confidence.
Speaking for the government, replied that the
government would prefer all animals to be stunned before
slaughter, but derogations had existed for Muslim and Jewish
authorities since the 1930s. “We will continue to work with all
stakeholders to ensure we have the highest standards of animal
welfare whilst ensuring freedom of religious expression.”
(a campaigner on this
subject for many years) asked for the government to ban exports
of all animals without pre-stunning. Baroness Vere said the UK
was governed by EU regulations. But the UK had stricter national
rules which provided for the types of stunning which could be
carried out and set out exactly what should happen if an animal
was to be slaughtered without stunning.
said it was
incomprehensible that the contract to supply 50,000 lamb
carcasses to Saudi Arabia allowed for slaughter without
pre-stunning. Other EU countries had measures to ensure that
animals slaughtered without stunning was for their domestic
markets only. The minister said she was not aware of a contract
to export 50,000 sheep to Saudi Arabia. An export health
certificate had been issued but not used.
pointed out that all New
Zealand lamb imported into the EU was Halal. Baroness Vere agreed
there was no one national authority which certified halal meat,
which was part of the problem. The government had committed to
working with stakeholders and religious authorities to look at
the research around recoverability from stunning and whether it
fell within religious guidelines.
asked about
meat provided in schools; asked about halal meat
mislabelled as ‘normal meat’; and congratulated the government
for its sensitivities to religious minorities.