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PETA against ruthless treatment of animals in vet Institutions

On an appeal from the US-based People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) on rectal palpation’ trainings on cows in Pakistani vet schools, the University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences (UVAS) Vice Chancellor Prof Dr Nasim Ahmad on Sunday said strict procedures were being taken to ensure painless surgical procedures and training involving animals in the veterinary institutes.

The appeal reads that PETA has just received a disturbing whistleblower report that students at the College of Veterinary and Animal Sciences (CVAS), Jhang, a UVAS sub-campus, and other veterinary colleges across Pakistan are using healthy, live cows and buffaloes to conduct invasive and painful training exercises.

In response, the group sent urgent letters to UVAS VC and the Pakistan Veterinary Medical Council (PVMC) President Prof Dr Masood Rabbani, advice them to adopt Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s recent Islamabad Capital Territory Reforms guidelines that prohibit the use of live animals in testing and surgical veterinary training and require swapping to animal-free simulation models immediately. According to the whistleblower report, at CVAS alone, more than 100 students a day use irritant solutions and rectally palpate cows and buffaloes, often forcefully. Two students reportedly inserted their entire arms, causing bleeding. Students also reportedly use artificial insemination rods daily, causing lacerations and bleeding to the animals’ reproductive organs. After their internal organs have been damaged, the animals are auctioned off for slaughter, the report says.

“Violating animals’ rectums and vaginas dozens of times a day until their bodies give out, after which they’re sold for slaughter, is barbaric,” says PETA Vice President Shalin Gala. “PETA is calling on Pakistan’s veterinary authorities to adopt and nationalise Prime Minister Sharif’s historic reforms that prohibit live testing of animals in veterinary colleges, and replace all painful, invasive exercises with superior and humane simulation models.”

Just last month, Gala, PETA president Ingrid Newkirk, and other representatives of the group held a historic meeting with Salman Sufi (head of PM’s Strategic Reforms Unit) to discuss veterinary school reforms and other issues. The meeting followed a shocking video footage showing dogs, who had reportedly been kidnapped from the streets, lying in pools of blood and excreta after being operated on without anesthetics, prompting Sufi to announce, “Live testing of animals in vet colleges and industrial complexes is banned from today in Islamabad Capital Territory.”

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