‘Surplus’ animals in animal testing: One Voice’s plea to the administrative tribunal

‘Surplus’ animals in animal testing: One Voice’s plea to the administrative tribunal

Animal testing
03.05.2023
See all news

One Voice is filing a plea for the breeding of more than one million ‘surplus’ animals in animal testing to be avoided.

Almost one and a half million animals suffer every year from being kept captive in laboratories, stocked ‘just in case’ and eventually thrown out, like equipment. This represents a third of animals shut up in cages for animal testing. We have entered a plea at the Paris Administrative Tribunal so that the Ministry of Research implements effective measures to reduce this number by avoiding the birth of ‘surplus’ animals.

«Laboratories consider animals as equipment. This is nothing new. What would it be like if they had an ounce of compassion and a long-term outlook? They stock mice and dogs like packets of pasta, in case they are needed, needs assessed any old how, because this waste of life, animals being thrown in the bin, is not their problem. All they do is waste, even when living beings are concerned. We are going to remind them of their commitment to reduce the number of animals passing through their miserable cages.»Muriel Arnal, President of One Voice

Almost one and a half million of these animals killed in France every year…

Each year, almost two million animals are used in experiments by French laboratories. Six hundred thousand additional animals are exploited for the creation and upkeep of genetically modified lines…

As for the others, they are bred, kept in captivity, then killed, simply considered as projected ‘stock’. And we are not talking about one or two individuals: in 2017 (the most recent available data), there were almost one and a half million animals in France alone! Among the four million who were bred or imported here each year for animal testing, more than one in three is therefore involved. Some will see their tissue taken for post-mortem analysis, which justifies their exploitation in the eyes of the laboratories. For the others in any case, the suffering of life in a cage could have been avoided.

…while the European Union demands that their number be reduced!

Perhaps these animals suffer less than their peers used in experimental procedures – incidentally, they are not counted in the Ministry’s annual statistical surveys (which we have analysed and presented in detail), and any laboratory accredited in animal testing can breed and kill them at their will. But an entire life in captivity in a minuscule cage (scarcely half an A4 sheet for three adult mice!) is unbearable.

The refusal from the Ministry to implement measures to reduce the number of these animals is against the spirit of the regulations and the French State’s commitment regarding the European Directive. The Directive would like everything possible to be done to reduce their number, whether they are eventually used or not.

We are demanding solutions

Last year, German prosecutors launched an investigation to determine whether laboratories slaughtering surplus animals constitutes a crime as long as it involves killing them without adequate justification. The investigation is still ongoing. If these practices are in fact ruled as criminal, Germany will have another reason to prevent the birth of these animals, which will spare them from suffering a life in captivity devoid of interest.

On our side of the Rhine, at the beginning of October 2022, we wrote to the Ministry of Research on the matter. Not having received a response three months later, and represented by the Géo Avocats law firm who will assist us with these issues, One Voice is therefore deferring to the Paris Administrative Tribunal. Thus, we are asking the judge to arrange for the Ministry to apply European regulations by implementing the necessary measures to obtain a notable reduction in the number of ‘surplus’ animals bred and killed shamelessly. The file is being investigated and we are waiting for the date of the hearing. The courts will have to decide.

Translated from the French by Joely Justice

Share the article