| 09 Décembre 2014
BRUSSELS  (8 December 2014)—The European Commission has implemented a conditional  ban of the import of horsemeat from Mexico following a series of audits  by the Food and Veterinary Office. The audits consistently identified  serious problems with the lack of traceability of horses slaughtered for  EU export with origins in the United States and Mexico, particularly  regarding veterinary medical treatment records. The most recent audit  published on 4th December is a damning indictment of the  horse slaughter industry and the Mexican authorities’ failure to rectify  previously identified problems. Although  the ban has been introduced due to food safety concerns, animal  protection group Humane Society International/Europe says the decision  could potentially have a positive animal welfare impact in reducing the  number of horses suffering in the Mexican slaughter pipeline.  Dr. Joanna Swabe, HSI’s European Union executive director, welcomed the decision: “Banning  horsemeat imports from Mexico is long overdue. For years Humane Society  International has repeatedly sounded the alarm about horsemeat entering  the food chain that does not fully meet EU safety standards. As well as  safeguarding EU consumer safety, closing our borders to horsemeat from  these countries is important for animal welfare, too. Horse slaughter,  regardless of which country it is in, is fraught with inherent cruelty.” Currently  87 percent of the eligible horses slaughtered in Mexico for meat export  to the EU originate from the U.S.; horses are not bred to be eaten in  either the U.S. or Mexico. Additionally, the use of veterinary drugs  such as phenylbutazone, banned for use in food animals, is widespread;  mandatory lifetime medical record-keeping is non-existent in both  countries. As confirmed by the latest audit,  the FVO has consistently found questionable the reliability and  veracity of vendor statements about U.S. and Mexican horses’ treatment  records, meaning such meat entering the EU could contain banned  veterinary drugs. The FVO also confirmed HSI’s particular concerns  regarding the very poor welfare conditions at export facilities located  in the U.S., during transport from the U.S. to Mexico and at the  slaughterhouses. HSI  acknowledges that the Commission is at last taking rigorous steps to  protect EU consumer safety, but would like to see a moratorium covering  Canada, Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay where similar traceability  problems with horsemeat exports persist. Facts
Humane Society International/Europe welcomes increased consumer protection, fewer horses suffering