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abdulhakeem
07-01-08, 12:29 AM
In a tiny space a battery chicken has 40 days to live before it is slaughtered and sold for £2.50 in a supermarket

By Martin Hickman, Consumer Affairs Correspondent
4 January 2008

A covertly filmed video of factory-farmed chickens struggling to walk and enduring distressing and unnatural conditions is set to ignite a growing campaign to improve the lives of Britain's 800 million "broiler" chickens.

The animal welfare group Compassion in World Farming (CIWF) shot the film at a farm which supplies meat to the country's leading supermarkets to illustrate the grim life inside chicken "coops" designed for 25,000 to 50,000 birds.

Video (http://www.friction.tv/flvs/1537.flv)screened courtesy of www.friction.tv

The grainy video footage shows what looks like a white carpet of thousands of birds shuffling round aimlessly in a dimly lit shed. Some are limping or lifeless. Outside are dustbins stuffed full of dead chicks.

Although their final destination is unknown, the birds were bought by a company which supplies more than 80 per cent of McDonald's chicken nuggets, as well as Morrisons and Sainsbury's.

Last night the company, Sun Valley Foods, of Hereford, announced an investigation into conditions at Uphampton Farm in nearby Leominster.

The footage was released to The Independent amid a wave of concern at the treatment of factory-farmed animals in Britain.

This week, the RSPCA called on supermarkets to stop selling mass-produced standard chickens, whose lives are short, featureless and often racked with pain.

Next week, on Channel 4, the chefs Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall and Jamie Oliver will seek to show the ugly reality of cheap chicken and call on supermarkets to improve their conditions, and the public to choose free-range or organic birds.

About 855 million chickens are slaughtered for meat annually in the UK, but as well as being the most popular meat, chicken is the subject of most welfare concern. The majority of birds – about 95 per cent – are kept indoors, packed densely into vast sheds in what academics and campaigners say are clearly harmful conditions.

Research has found that 27 per cent of these standard chickens have significant or serious walking difficulties because their legs cannot support their abnormally large bodies genetically bred for meat.

Many also suffer burns to the legs because they are standing on sawdust soaked with urine that is only changed every six weeks.

One in 20 birds dies from sudden death syndrome, usually caused by respiratory or heart failure.

CIWF visited Uphampton Farm because its chicks are supplied by Aviagen, one of the three main breeding companies in the world.

During the visits in October and November, activists found many birds in distress. One, seeking to move away from the cameraman, staggered six steps before collapsing. After getting up, it made seven more awkward steps before collapsing again. Several others were reluctant to move when their natural response would have been to do so.

Lesley Lambert, director of research at CIWF, said: "That level of lameness is usually associated with pain. It's quite possible that the birds were in chronic pain.

"There was at least one dead bird on the floor. There was a dusty atmosphere with high levels of excreta."

Ed Roberts, whose son Jonathan runs Uphampton Farm, denied there was a problem with lameness and said mortality rarely exceeded 3 per cent. He said all inquiries should be dealt with by Sun Valley Food, one of the big players in the £2bn-a-year British chicken business.

Sun Valley said it tookits responsibilities for animal welfare very seriously and announced an investigation into conditions shown in the video.

CIWF, however, said conditions at the farm were typical for a large chicken shed and represented a true picture of the state of the industry. These birds are kept indoors for all of their lives, generally little more than a month. They are slaughtered at 39 to 42 days, compared with 56 days for free-range birds and 80 days for organic birds.

Organic birds are allowed to roam free and have perches and other chances to exhibit natural behaviour. However they are three times more expensive than standard chickens.

In three daily one-hour programmes from Monday, Fearnley-Whittingstall will reveal the results of an experiment to show the difference between high and low welfare chicken systems. He divided a shed in two, rearing 1,500 free-range chickens on one side and 2,500 indoor chickens on the other.

Fearnley-Whittingstall said: "We basically want to change the way a chicken is produced in Britain. We think the more people understand, the more they'll be inclined to upgrade the welfare of the birds that they do buy."

The British Poultry Council, which represents the chicken industry, denied that birds were necessarily better off in free-range or organic systems and said it did care about the welfare of birds.

Its chief executive. Peter Bradnock, said, however, that customers were more concerned about price and food safety than welfare. He said: "This whole idea that the industry is dark, brutal and uncaring is rubbish.

"The people who are producing these chickens are producing them to what the market wants. All of these production systems are available to consumers and are clearly labelled. There is no subterfuge."

Compassion in World Farming: www.ciwf.org.uk

http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_britain/article3307570.ece

Te'oma
07-01-08, 09:36 AM
This is why each year I freerange between 50 and 100 chickens. I buy the chicks in May and slaughter around the end of August or September. The birds are the size of small turkeys by then and they aren't full of hormones or other chemicals from processed feed. When chickens are kept in "chicken barns" they have to be fed a diet of antibiotics like streptomycin to prevent lung infections. Some barns don't bother sexing the chicks so they just add estrogen to the mix to prevent the roosters from showing their characteristics and fighting with each other.
Some scientists are surmising that the exposure to androgens such as estrogen in our meat could be one reason we are seeing more cases of precocious puberty in girls as well as the lowering of sperm counts in men. I would also add that some laying mashes have high levels of estrogen too. This is to prolong the laying cycle and maximize the production of eggs. Anyone wonder what they do with the birds that are too old to lay anymore? Ask yourself that while you are chewing on a McChicken or any chicken burger for that matter...

Tahiyah
07-01-08, 12:25 PM
This is why each year I freerange between 50 and 100 chickens. I buy the chicks in May and slaughter around the end of August or September. The birds are the size of small turkeys by then and they aren't full of hormones or other chemicals from processed feed. When chickens are kept in "chicken barns" they have to be fed a diet of antibiotics like streptomycin to prevent lung infections. Some barns don't bother sexing the chicks so they just add estrogen to the mix to prevent the roosters from showing their characteristics and fighting with each other.
Some scientists are surmising that the exposure to androgens such as estrogen in our meat could be one reason we are seeing more cases of precocious puberty in girls as well as the lowering of sperm counts in men. I would also add that some laying mashes have high levels of estrogen too. This is to prolong the laying cycle and maximize the production of eggs. Anyone wonder what they do with the birds that are too old to lay anymore? Ask yourself that while you are chewing on a McChicken or any chicken burger for that matter...

what do you mean by freerange? you have chickens running around everywhere? a giant coop? you have to have a permit for that in canada?

i wanna raise chickens, i am finally in an area big enough to do so. what you feed yours?

neelu
07-01-08, 06:04 PM
I have been desperately trying to find a source of organic halal meat (I know about akhi Rida in Somerset but his site doesn't yet provide chickens) in the UK but it's like trying to get blood out of a stone because unfortunately most of the community only care about getting their meat as cheaply as possible and are either unaware of or blatantly ignoring the health risks:(

Rosalie-Beauty
08-01-08, 01:47 AM
same story in the U.S. The chickens are kept in 1ft by 1ft cages and stacked up one each other. Some of them are even debeaked because they become aggresive in such a constricting environment. The old or deformed chickens are thrown in a heap to die.

Te'oma
08-01-08, 04:51 AM
what do you mean by freerange? you have chickens running around everywhere? a giant coop? you have to have a permit for that in canada?

i wanna raise chickens, i am finally in an area big enough to do so. what you feed yours?

The farm where I keep the animals belongs to a friend of mine. The deal is that I buy the animals in the spring, they take care of them over the summer and we butcher in the fall and split the meat. In total there is 230 acres of land.
We have one acre that is surrounded by 3 metre fences with the chicken wire extending down about 1/2 metre below ground to prevent critters like foxes getting in. The chickens have a shelter area but they are free to move around the enclosure as they want and they feed on the bugs and the grass. We also supplement their diet with an organic alfalfa/oats and molasses mix but that is just something to make sure that they are getting a complete diet. The end result is chickens that weigh in at 6-8 pounds and they taste a lot better then any store bought birds that I have ever tasted.

Syrian714
08-01-08, 09:52 PM
I hate to read stuff like this. :(

Insha'Allah I will someday have the means to free-range my own chickens.

(*_Hamzah
08-01-08, 09:59 PM
I’ve never really put an iota of thought on where my chicken comes from, if it’s halaal then it’s good enough for me?

And moi, eat plenty of chicken :(

But I’m starting to wonder if chickens can be kept in such immune conditions then what is the likelihood it was slaughtered in accordance with the Shariah

Le Croyant
08-01-08, 10:03 PM
For those in US, I used to goto a farm & slaughter my own chickens. They were free range & cheap too.. usually got 3 chickens for $10. Bu they were not 8lbs..may be 4-5 lbs. But I prefer smaller chickens so worked out for me..

Just call local farms & inquire.

Here in Saudi... i still get fresh chicken but these fresh chicken r gettin closed. I absolutely hate it... the only option vl b to eat frozen chicken sold by large corporations. These fresh shops were locally owned & were community shops. I beginning to hate globalisation even though I m a culprit myself.

Hafsah
09-01-08, 11:17 AM
there is a farm in the UK which provides halaal poultry and meat...its quite expensive though but i guess thats the price that needs to be paid? inshaAllaah will try and find the website for you

its not only about the way the animal is cut..but also how it is treated...we are supposed to care for animals...not stuff 10000's of chickens in a tiny room, with no space to GROW let alone run around and live, surely animal abuse isnt very halaal?

seven
09-01-08, 11:30 AM
http://www.organic-halal-meat.com/