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Saturday, July 12, 2014

GUESTS OUTRAGED AS ANASTASIA HOTEL IN CYPRUS THROWS A HOMELESS PUPPY INTO A WASTE CRUSHER - BILLY, a seven month old puppy survived with brain damage and a broken back, and died after days of agony - Calls for BOYCOTT

ONLINE PETITION FOR CYPRUS TO END THE CRUELTY, TORTURE AND ABUSE OF ANIMALS, AND TO ENFORCE ANIMAL PROTECTION LAWS

BILLY'S LAW 

There is also a call for boycott of the Anastasia Hotel in Cyprus.

Expat Britons storm Cyprus hotel after staff kill stray seven-month-old puppy in waste crusher. 
  • Holidaymakers found 'Billy' the poodle with horrific injuries in the bin - including a broken back and brain damage
  • Thousands have signed petition calling for Cyprus to enforce animal cruelty laws and bring animal abusers to justice
  • Expats and UK tourists call for boycott of Anastasia Beach Hotel
  • The seven-month-old puppy was found by holidaymakers lying at the bottom of the bin still alive, but having suffered horrific injuries, including a broken back and brain damage
    Britons are at the centre of an international animal rights protest after a dog was thrown into a hotel machine used for crushing rubbish and later died. 

    Staff at the hotel in Cyprus had apparently tried to dispose of the stray poodle in a large recycling bin fitted with an electrically-operated crushing mechanism. 
     
    The seven-month-old puppy was found by holidaymakers lying at the bottom of the bin still alive, but having suffered horrific injuries.  Appalled tourists called a local vet to the scene but the dog, dubbed Billy, died within days.
     
    Now thousands have signed an online ‘Billy’s Law’ petition calling for Cyprus to enforce animal cruelty laws and bring animal abusers to justice. Expat Britons and holidaymakers from the UK have also joined calls for a boycott of the Anastasia Beach Hotel.  
     
    Thomas Cook and easyJet, which both offer holidays to the hotel in the resort of Protaras, said last night they were ‘extremely concerned’ by the allegations.  

    Antonis Alkiviades, who works at MedVets, the surgery which cared for Billy, said: ‘When we went to the hotel, he was already in a coma. We were shocked and it was even more of a shock when we were told he was put into this bin.’
     
    Mr Alkiviades said Billy had a broken back and other broken bones and was unable to breathe. Vets later realised he had brain damage. 
     
    Anger: British expats and tourists protest at the Anastasia hotel in Cyprus where stray puppy Billy was thrown in a crusher bin before he diedBilly was visited by dozens of concerned locals and tourists. Briton Lynn Gandy, 61, said: ‘He looked terrible. He was a poor, frail, little dog. To think somebody could throw a live animal into a crusher beggars belief. It is savagery.’ 

    Another woman said the local reaction to Billy’s death had been so fierce that she feared there would be riots.  
     
    On Friday, British tourists joined expats marching outside the Anastasia, which is part of the Tsokkos group, Cyprus’s largest hotel chain. They held banners with slogans reading ‘Punish people who abuse animals’ and ‘Support Billy’s Law and stop animal cruelty now’ while also chanting ‘Justice for Billy’. 
     
    Ross Breakwell, from London, who was on holiday in Cyprus, said: ‘I never imagined a country within the European Union could be so lax when it comes to something as important as animal rights.  ‘I’m shocked and disgusted by this incident. It will make me think twice before coming back to Cyprus and I definitely would never stay in a Tsokkos hotel. All tourists to Cyprus should boycott the company.’
     
    Mr Alkiviades also called for tougher laws on the island. He said: ‘You have the RSPCA in the UK. We don’t. We need people to be able to reinforce laws and punish cruelty.’
     
    Nicos Anastasiades, the president of Cyprus, condemned Billy’s death and described the incident as ‘a disgrace for society and our country’.
     
    Thomas Cook said: ‘We take such incidents extremely seriously, and in no way condone this type of alleged behaviour.   'This is obviously a very serious allegation, given that Thomas Cook closely audits properties to ensure the very highest levels of health, safety and quality standards are maintained.’
     
    Tsokkos Hotels said: ‘Hotel management received complaints from customers about the fact that a sick stray puppy wandered around. The hotel manager immediately gave instructions to two employees to take the puppy to a local shelter to obtain appropriate care.  ‘Unfortunately, the employees did not follow the instructions and proceeded to an inhuman act, unacceptable and condemnable by Tsokkos Hotels.   'As soon as Tsokkos Hotels became aware of the incident, the puppy was transferred to a veterinary clinic to receive all necessary treatment.’
     
      
    Tsokos, the company that owns the Anastasia Hotel
    https://www.facebook.com/tsokkos.hotels

    CYPRUS MAIL - News archive of animal cruelty in Cyprus
    http://cyprus-mail.com/tag/animal-cruelty/

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    The horrible slaughter of sheep in Cyprus while they are still conscious.  Authorities think that there is the possibility that they are being processed this way due to religious reasons.  Muslim law does not allow for animals to be properly stunned before slaughter.
     
    A member of Compassion in World Farming’s Investigation Unit took a video of sheep and goats chained by their rear legs while conscious, hosted up upside down and “bleating piteously”.  ”It was only at this stage that they were stunned,” the organisation said in a news release. The group said that goats’ horns were cut off immediately after their throats were cut, making it unlikely that the animals were dead and claiming they “would have felt an extreme amount of pain”. 
     
    “This is some of the worst European slaughter footage I have ever seen… What is so disturbing is that new EU slaughter regulations came into force this year – and they are being largely ignored,” said Compassion in World Farming’s chief policy advisor, Peter Stevenson.
     
     
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