Tracks
of their Tears
Belle
Vue
(
Manchester )
5
articles
Wimbledon
| Catford | Oxford
| Crayford | Portsmouth
| Hall Green | Belle
Vue | Ellesmere port
| Kinsley | Swindon
| Perry Barr | Newcastle
Stadium | Brighton and
Hove | Sittingbourne
| Shawfield | Sunderland
| Henlow | Yarmouth
| Nottingham | Swansea
| Glastonbury (Abbey Moor)
| Pelaw Grange | Milton
Keynes | Ayr | Poole
| The
Sunday Times September 17, 2006 http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-2361517,00.html |
|
Pet
home 'a conveyor belt of killing'
Daniel Foggo
|
AT FIRST glance the white-washed single-storey building could pass
for a holiday chalet. Tucked away among Leigh Animal Sanctuarys
complex of kennels, the bland exterior of Block 8 gives
nothing away.
But anyone venturing inside encounters a sinister scene: a stuffy
boxroom in which thousands of dogs have allegedly met their deaths.
It stinks of dead dogs in there, said Jane, a former
staff member who worked at the site in Greater Manchester for years.
It is a sickening smell.
The dominant features of the white-walled and red-floored room are
two industrial-sized freezers.
They are the last stop on what former staff and greyhound trainers
say is a conveyor belt of killing, starting with dogs being delivered
at the sanctuarys front desk on an almost daily basis; leading
to lethal drugs fired directly into their chests; and ending with
the bodies dumped in the freezers.
Ostensibly the sanctuary, which has been open since 1975 to rehome
unwanted animals, is offering succour to dogs found wandering the
streets by council dog wardens or brought in by owners who no longer
feel able to look after their pets.
But the reality behind the facade is that, according to the testimony
of former staff members, about half of all the dogs entering will
be killed, often within days or even hours.
The testimony is backed by interviews with three greyhound trainers
who said the sanctuary had long been used to dispose of unwanted
dogs.
The question of what happens to greyhounds after their racing careers
are finished has become a scandal following revelations in July
by The Sunday Times that one man in Seaham, Co Durham, had acted
as an unofficial executioner for the industry for at
least 15 years, killing and burying dogs in his one-acre allotment.
The resulting outcry provoked inquiries by the government, Inland
Revenue, Environment Agency, RSPCA and the authorities governing
greyhound racing.
The Labour peer Lord Lipsey, who is chairman of the British Greyhound
Racing Board which represents many of the countrys dog tracks,
said that while the killing of dogs was abhorrent, it
was restricted to the odd bad penny.
However, trainers who frequent Leigh Animal Sanctuary disagree.
Three greyhound trainers gave interviews, on condition of anonymity,
stating that the facility has been the killing ground of choice
for the industry in the northwest for many years.
All said that it came down to a matter of cost, with the sanctuary
considerably undercutting vets prices. One said: Its
£35 at Leigh Animal Sanctuary but if the vet put them down
at the track its £65. Every track uses it, they come
from all over, Belle Vue [Manchester], Kinsley [West Yorkshire]
and Doncaster [South Yorkshire].
Vets in the vicinity charge up to £70 to put down a dog and
are likely to ask the owner why they want the animal put to sleep.
The trainer, who admitted taking greyhounds to be put down at the
sanctuary, said: The majority of registered trainers take
them there. They have put down thousands.
Ive
seen loads of dogs going there [just because they] have not turned
out to be any good for racing.
Greyhounds are the breed most likely to be summarily put down
since they are seen as difficult to rehome and therefore of no
profit to the owners, claim ex-employees of the sanctuary. Many
greyhounds are brought by their owners or trainers when their
racing careers are curtailed through lameness, age or lack of
speed.
Most of these will specifically ask for their dogs to be put down.
The sanctuary is happy to oblige with no questions asked. While
killing dogs humanely, such as with lethal injections, is not
illegal, trainers belonging to the National Greyhound Racing Club
(NGRC) are required to put dogs down only as a last resort and
then only under the supervision of a vet.
But according to former staff at the sanctuary, a vet was rarely
present when dogs were killed. The drill was for the dogs
to be kept in an isolation block until they can be checked over
by a vet but many greyhounds didnt even make it that far,
they just went straight to Block 8, said a former employee
who asked for her name to be withheld.
It was the same with any dog which was considered to be
ugly or otherwise unlikely to sell, she said. If anyone
rang back later to ask about a dog we always said it had been
rehomed rather than admit it had been put down. The sanctuary
is run in a very commercially minded way.
If it is something pedigree or attractive, it might sell
to a member of the public for up to £250, which is a big
profit.
But dogs like greyhounds are considered a burden since they
are thought to be difficult to rehome; so instead they just tend
to put them down straight away.
One trainer said: They can take £35 for rehoming,
put them to sleep and then theyve got £35. They dont
have to feed the animal, they just put it to sleep. Its
money for old rope.
A reporter posing as a greyhound owner contacted the sanctuary
by telephone last week, seeking to have some greyhounds put down.
After being told it was £35 per dog he asked if he needed
to make an appointment.
Receptionist: Just turn up any time.
Reporter: Ive got three greyhounds [to put down],
is that a problem?
Receptionist:
No, thats fine, you can bring them down any time .
. . Just remember its £35 each.
Two days later the reporter walked into the reception block and
spoke to a member of staff named David. During a perfunctory exchange
the reporter told David he had two young greyhounds to be brought
in the next day that he wanted putting down because they were
past it.
David, who declined to ask why he wanted them dead, charged the
trainer £70 and gave him a receipt. The blue
slip included the trainers name and address
and telephone number, but no details about the dogs except that
they were greyhounds.
David simply pencilled in the words For P.T.S [put
to sleep] on the line headed reason for rehoming.
When asked if he would lie to the trainers wife
if she called by telling her the dogs had been rehomed, David
agreed he would.
All three former staff said dogs were put down by other employees
rather than vets. One said: The dogs would be injected in
the chest because that was the quickest way, though vets usually
put the needle in a vein in a paw.
When the bodies were collected by a company to take them
for cremation they would write down a figure only about half the
actual number we were taking. I suppose that was to make it look
as if they werent putting that many down.
Yesterday Linda Buxton, 48, the woman in charge of the sanctuary,
refused to comment.
Others are also seeking to speak to Buxton. Alistair McLean, chief
executive of the NGRC, said: Following the Seaham exposé
we have had information about a number of places, one of which
was Leigh Animal Sanctuary, and we are now investigating to identify
those trainers using it.
Trio banned
Three leading figures in greyhound racing have been banned from
the sport for life following The Sunday Timess exposure
of the Seaham scandal.
At a stewards inquiry last week at the National Greyhound
Racing Club, Gillian Young and her father Sid Fenwick, both licensed
trainers, were warned off the sport, an effective
ban. Young was fined £1,500 and Fenwick £1,000.
Both had been pictured in July delivering two young greyhounds
to David Smith in Seaham, Co Durham, to be put down. Smith could
face two years in prison and a £20,000 fine.
Youngs husband Graeme, an assistant track manager, also
received a life ban and was fined £2,000. Trio banned
GA
comment : This
comes as no suprise (Click
here for full story of a previous expose) we have known for
years that 1000's of dogs were just disappearing after they "retired"
from racing and 1000's more before they even got to the track
... deemed too slow to even bother training. It is great news
to see that more and more of these secret killing fields are being
discovered and the true callous and murderous nature of the greyhound
racing industry is being revealed.
We
also note with interest that 3 people have been banned for life
by the racing authorities ... these are the 3 people who were
caught in the Times' previous expose of the Seaham killing ground
... the particularly interesting point is that they were randomly
caught because they just happened to bring dogs on the day when
the newspaper was there ... if every trainer/owner who had had
a dog killed at Seaham or similar places around the country was
banned for life ... there wouldn't be many left to carry on racing.
Take
Action: Please take the time to write or email your local paper
about this ... we must keep the pressure on and keep the issue
in peoples minds while it is still fresh. Today is the day to
act!
|
| Message
received from Dorothy, Manchester, February 2004. |
"I live
10 minutes down the road from Belle Vue greyhound track Manchester
and have lived within earshot of it for all of my 62 years. In the
winter, the noise of the speakers, crowds and loud music is quite
bad but not nearly as bad as in summer. The winter crowds usually
want to get into the Stadium quickly off the streets because of
the cold and wet weather. Coming out, they want to dash into their
cars or taxis rather than hang about too long. The summer punters
are the worst because the nights are lighter, so they stay longer
round the stadium grounds and nearby roads. They come out full of
drink, some excited with their winnings so have no concerns for
local residents who are not killjoys but would like some consideration
regarding noise, mess (take-away papers, drinks cans and bottles
etc) and the use of their doorways and gardens as urinals in some
cases. The drunken fights and shouting scares the elderly and wakes
children in their beds. Also there's the endless barking of the
dogs enclosed in the kennels leading up to the races and the sight
of the exhausted, tired little bodies being loaded into cold vans
for their long journey home where many will probably be shoved into
cages until the next trip or cast aside when they have injuries."
|
| From
Global Greyhounds (pro-greyhound racing forum), May 2003.
|
|
"...............i
bought my dog Eastwood in good faith from a chap i didn't know
through a well known sporting paper,we sent him for his first
trial around Belle Vue,he came out fine until the 3rd bend where
he was gasping for breath,he got back to the stadium kennels and
nearly collapsed.the vet brought him around and she said he is
very ill,he needs a blood test,so a week later the result said
he had heart worm,kidney infection,he was a week away from dying.now
the bloke i bought him off just didnt want to know&he knows who
he is!! he wouldnt give me anything for the vet bill or even worse
couldnt be bothered!! anyway the dog was off a month.he graded
on his 2nd trial still coughing slightly........."
Greyhound
Action comment: Apart from the issue of people involved in greyhound
racing selling dogs that are sick, the question has to be asked
as to why Eastwood was being raced if he was a week away from
death. He surely would have shown symptoms of his problems before
his first trial. And why was he raced again while he was still
coughing?
|
| Manchester
Evening News 30.10.02 |
|
Greyhound
left to waste away
The hunt is
on for the owners of a former racing greyhound who let it waste
away to less than half its normal weight. The emaciated animal
was found wandering the streets of Baguley, Wythenshawe, on Friday
and is now being cared for by the Manchester Dogs Home at Harpurhey.
The greyhound,
which staff have named George, has distinctive "Irish marks" which
show it was once a racer. These are the letters MEL on its left
ear and the letters RP on its right.
Dogs Home
manager Chris Lynch said it was the worst case they had seen for
a long time. "The poor thing is just bones and I'm afraid in this
state you've got to say that it's wilful abuse or neglect," she
said. "We are working with Belle Vue to try to trace the person
concerned from the markings on the dog but it could have had any
number of owners since it stopped racing.'' She added: "We would
urge anyone who has any idea who has let this dog get into this
state to give us a call right away. "In the meantime he's got
about five blankets on him and we're trying him on easily digestible
food to build up his strength.
|
| Article
from the Racing Post dated 25/5/02 refering to
the Belle Vue track in Manchester, one of 6 other tracks owned by
the Greyhound Racing Association, the people behind the proposed
Liverpool track. |
Belle
Vue inquest as two dogs die
Two
greyhounds were killed in the tenth race at Belle Vue on Thursday
night, writes John Forbes. Smart Signal, trained by Jimmy Gibson,
and Mariner Skid, trained by Andy Heyes, both fell in the race
and suffered broken necks. The track's general manager John
Gilburn said yesterday: "Although the falls happened at almost
the same spot, they were actually separate incidents. Freedom
Prince, who was in trap four, moved in on leaving the boxes
but moved out again as they went to the first turn where Mariner
Skid, who was in five, was moving in.The pair collided and Mariner
Skid did a double somersault in a horrible fall, landing on
his back, and I think his head hit the outside wall. I've studied
the slow motion replay many times and could see nothing to link
what happened to Smart Signal with that incident. He seemed
to develop a problem, race on for six or seven paces, and then
fall over. I have spoken to the vet, Diane Hodson, who could
not find any reason for it, although she did say this was an
old dog and could even have suffered a heart attack prior to
the fall." Pat Rosney, head man to Jimmy Gibson, said that the
whole kennel was very upset by the accident. "I wasn't there
myself," he said, "and Julie McCombe, who took him down to the
track said that she didn't actually see the fall. However he
was a bit of a special favourite of hers and she is absolutely
devastated. We have had a number of racing injuies in recent
weeks. I don't understand it, but it is frightening. The welfare
of the dogs must always come first and this needs looking into."
|
|
|
| |
|