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Government of Andhra Pradesh Directs Egg Producers to Discontinue Starvation Force Molting of Laying Hens HYDERABAD, India ( 29 July 2011)-The Director of Animal Husbandry for the Government of Andhra Pradesh, the largest egg producing state in India, has directed the Joint Directors (Animal Husbandry) and District Officers to ensure that the state's egg producers comply with the Animal Welfare Board of India's order to immediately discontinue starvation force molting regimes. In March, the Animal Welfare Board of India confirmed that starvation force molting is a punishable offence under India's Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act of 1960, and ordered all egg production facilities to immediately discontinue the practice. "We are grateful to the Government of Andhra Pradesh and we certainly expect that egg laying farms will comply with this order," said N.G. Jayasimha, manager of HSI's factory farming campaign in India. "Egg producers who continue to starve birds to induce molt must be prosecuted under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act." HSI urges anyone with information about a farm
inducing molting by starvation to email this confidential drop box: Copies of the Administration's order are
available on request. Facts: . Starvation force molting,
widely practiced on egg production facilities throughout India, deprives
egg-laying hens of food for up to 14 days and may be combined with one to
two days of water deprivation, in order to manipulate their egg laying
cycle. . During a forced molt, hens suffer greatly and may lose up to
35 percent of their body weight. This practice of food withdrawal has
been widely questioned throughout the world and is prohibited in
Australia, the European Union, and the United States, under the American
egg industry's animal husbandry program. . Starvation force
molting dramatically increases the risk of hens' laying
salmonella-infected eggs. . The Committee to Monitor Animal Welfare
Laws in Maharashtra has directed Maharashtra's Department of Animal
Husbandry, Dairy Development & Fisheries to ensure that all egg producers
and integrators discontinue starvation force molting. . The Joint
Secretary of Animal Husbandry and Fisheries, Government of Karnataka, has
directed all egg producers in the state to discontinue starvation force
molting. . The Director of Animal Husbandry for the Government of Goa
has directed the state's veterinary officers and the North and South Goa
SPCAs to ensure egg producers discontinue starvation force molting.
. The Chandigarh Administration's Director of Animal Husbandry has
requested state veterinary officers, the SPCA, and People for
Animals-Chandigarh to inspect all egg laying farms and ensure compliance
with the order against starvation force molting. . The Director of
Animal Husbandry for the Government of Rajasthan has directed the state's
veterinary officers, all district SPCAs, and all district collectors to
ensure that the state's egg producers comply with the Animal Welfare
Board of India's order to immediately discontinue starvation force
molting regimes. . The order against starvation force molting comes
on the heels of a growing movement against battery cage egg production
and farm animal cruelty. India's factory farms confine 140 to 200 million
hens in barren battery cages, where each bird lives within a space
smaller than a single standard sized sheet of paper. -30-
Media Contact: N.G.Jayasimha: (0)9490732614,
ngjayasimha@hsi.org Humane Society International and its partner
organizations together constitute one of the world's largest animal
protection organizations-backed by 11 million people. HSI fights for the
protection of all animals through advocacy, education, and hands-on
programs. On the web at
https://webmail.hsus.org/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.hsi.org/
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