The GodFather Posted June 10, 2021 Posted June 10, 2021 The animals are my life,” says Sulaiman Tameer. In one corner of his desk is a statuette of a rearing horse. A watercolour of a donkey hangs behind it. “That one lives with a government minister,” he nods at a photo of a rescued kitten. “But I won’t tell you which one.” The veterinarian’s office, which shares space with his clinic on a sidestreet in Duhok in the Kurdistan region, in northern Iraq, is where Tameer divides his time between treating animals and campaigning for government action on their rights. The son of a farmer, Tameer fled Saddam Hussein’s regime as a young man by riding a donkey over the mountains into Turkey. After graduating from veterinary school he decided to give back to the animals that he felt had saved him. He began veterinary work in the early 1990s and became well known locally as a civil society activist – he set up the Kurdistan Organization for Animal Rights Protection – before linking up with other international animal rights groups. The autonomous Kurdistan region has no ban on dog fighting, no standards for slaughterhouses, and hunting for sport is simply a matter of choosing an imported rifle at a bazaar and driving to the mountains. Recent viral videos have shown dogs fighting to the death, the shooting of a wild boar at a mountain picnic, and an old man viciously stomping on a wayward goat. Frustrated with the lack of government action, Tameer wrote a sweeping draft law to address failures in animal protection a decade ago. Despite years of lobbying in Kurdistan and Iraq, the draft bill failed to gain support from politicians. That changed, however, when a number of animal-loving cabinet ministers helped Tameer by lobbying colleagues to get the law considered by the justice ministry and Kurdish parliament, which is to debate and vote on it later this year. Tameer has not given up on pushing for similar legislation for the whole of Iraq, but disarray in the federal government and elections later this year make this a bad time for further efforts. The Kurdistan region has been effectively autonomous since 1992, but was not granted political recognition until 2005. The region’s autonomy is akin to that of the UK’s devolved countries, and so the animal rights law, if passed, would apply only locally. The bill is grounded in Islam, similar legislation in the region and Europe, and the UK’s five freedoms relating to animal welfare: protection from hunger and thirst; discomfort; pain, injury or disease; the freedom to express normal behaviour, and freedom from fear and distress. Tameer sees these as extending to all animals: domestic, stray and farmed. He stresses that animal abuse is haram – a sin – in his religion. “Islam affirms that it is not permissible to harm animals, and citizens must deal with animals gently, especially animals that do not pose a threat to the individual and society,” says Dr Abdulla Said Waisy of Kurdistan’s Union of Islamic Scholars, though he would not be drawn on committing full support, saying the union would need to review the final bill in detail. Beef is a staple of Iraqi Kurds’ meals – many eat “grill” daily – and farmers rear goats and sheep, which are sometimes slaughtered and donated to poor families, or killed in religious festivals. The region is thought to be where sheep and goats were first domesticated about 8,000 years ago. A wide range of poultry is also farmed and sold. In Erbil, Kurdistan’s crowded capital, tired white chickens are found in every neighbourhood, packed into streetside cages or in rooms at the backs of the kebab shops where they’ll be eaten. Like his NGO, Tameer’s proposed animal rights law is a first for Iraq. It would establish a welfare council, chaired by Kurdistan’s prime minister, and responsible for recommendations and regulations. It would also license hunters, zoos, breeders and slaughterhouses and mandate fines for abuses. The bill covers all aspects of an animal’s life, from breeding to care to slaughter or euthanasia; it criminalises subjecting a farm animal to unnecessary pain, including overwork, and sets standards for livestock transport. In a country where the mercury hits 50C (122F) at the start of summer, it’s common to see sheep hauled from countryside to abattoir in the back of a pickup, tied by their necks. The bill would bring Iraq in line with the UK guidance that only healthy livestock be transported for slaughter, in a way to prevent injury or suffering, with sufficient water and rest. 1
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