The Victoria Racing Club said 10% of ticket sales from the Melbourne Cup Carnival
and 5% of annual membership fees would go to fund retired horse welfare (AFP Photo/PAUL CROCK) |
Australia's racing industry on Monday pledged millions of dollars for the care of retired racehorses, as it scrambles to address the fallout from animal cruelty allegations that sparked a major outcry.
National
broadcaster ABC revealed this month that thousands of retired animals were
being sent to abattoirs in secret, where many were allegedly beaten and abused
before being killed.
Racing
Victoria said it would spend at least Aus$25 million (US$17 million) over the
next three years to expand an existing program of rehoming retired horses and
to create a new welfare taskforce designed to prevent cruelty to racing
animals.
The
organisation's chairman, Brian Kruger, said it was clear the industry needed to
"step up and do more".
"It's
incumbent on us to ensure our horses have opportunities for a rewarding life
after racing," he told reporters in Melbourne.
Separately,
the Victoria Racing Club said 10 percent of ticket sales from the Melbourne Cup
Carnival and five percent of annual membership fees would go toward a new
equine welfare fund, which it is seeding with an initial Aus$1.5 million.
About
300,000 people attend the four-day Carnival each year, with tickets to next
week's prestigious Cup race costing $90 for a general admission pass and up to
hundreds of dollars for exclusive packages.
Liz Walker,
the CEO of animal welfare charity RSPCA in Victoria, said the measures were a
"good start" but did not go far enough.
"It
tends to be focused towards the end-of-life of racehorses and we would say they
really have to go right back to the beginning, and we really do need to have
that birth-to-death reporting and recording as well as injury statistics,"
she told the ABC.
While the
slaughter of racehorses is not illegal in Australia, the ABC investigation
found the practice was far more widespread than acknowledged.
The racing
industry insists that less than one percent of retired thoroughbreds end up in
an abattoir or knackery, but the ABC claimed about 4,000 horses
"disappeared" each year, with meat from slaughtered animals being
shipped abroad for human consumption and pet food.
The
Queensland government last week announced an inquiry into the treatment of
horses at abattoirs in response to the revelations.
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