Animal rights organisation Peta has alleged sheep are being mistreated on farms in New Zealand.
The non-profit has released an 鈥渆xpos茅鈥 into , accusing farmers of whipping, tackling, cutting and abusing their animals.
In a summary of the investigation published on its website, Peta alleged animals sustained injuries and wounds, claimed shearers 鈥渉it sheep with various objects, including a ski pole鈥 and said that 鈥渙ne worker slammed a sheep鈥檚 head against a hard wooden board three times鈥.
Videos published on its website and Facebook page appear to show a shearer with his boot on a sheep鈥檚 throat, and other animals bleeding from cuts sustained during shearing.
Photos also show dead sheep on different properties, some infested with flies.
Peta Asia-Pacific said in a statement it had 鈥渢urned over the evidence to New Zealand officials and is urging them to investigate and file appropriate cruelty charges for apparent violations of the law, which include abusing and wounding sheep and causing them unreasonable pain鈥.
The Ministry for Primary Industries confirmed it had been contacted about the allegations.
鈥淢PI has received a complaint and video clips alleging mistreatment of sheep by some shearers,鈥 Peter Hyde, MPI manager of animal welfare and national animal identification and tracing compliance (South), told the Herald. 鈥淲e note some of the allegations date back to 2023. MPI is investigating the complaints.鈥
The Peta expos茅 also claimed a was the site of some of the incidents in its investigation, alleging shearers at the farm 鈥渟tepped on a thrashing sheep鈥檚 neck, dragged sheep across the floor, sewed up a sheep鈥檚 bloody wound without any painkillers, and other atrocities鈥.
The Ministry for Primary Industries confirmed it is investigating allegations of mistreatment of sheep by some shearers. Photo / Liam Clayton
A representative for Lauer鈥檚 company Orange Lakes (NZ) told the Herald it had 鈥渘o involvement with the farming operation鈥 and the property is subleased to Hunter Valley Farming.
鈥淭丑别&苍产蝉辫; by independent shearing contractors engaged by Hunter Valley Farming,鈥 the spokesperson said.
Lauer鈥檚 representative said they had alerted the Overseas Investment Office. 鈥淥range Lakes and Mr Lauer take the allegations extremely seriously and have commenced their own investigations,鈥 they said.
Peta released its alleged findings on December 31, outlining what it said its investigators saw at 11 ZQ-wool-producing locations across New Zealand from 2023 to 2024.
The organisation also named a range of brands it claims use , including Allbirds, Fj盲llr盲ven, and Loro Piana, and called on them to stop their use of wool. It did not provide proof the farms in the footage supplied those brands.
The Herald has approached Federated Farmers and the NZ Shearing Contractors Association for comment.
ZQ Merino is a wool certification developed by The New Zealand Merino Company, established in 2007 in Christchurch.
On its website, ZQ Merino says it is 鈥渢he world鈥檚 most exclusive ethical wool鈥.
Suppliers must adhere to ZQ Grower Standard requirements, undertake a Land Environmental Plan, and farms are audited by a third party.
ZQ Merino did not respond to the Herald鈥檚 inquiries.
New Zealand had approximately 23.59 million sheep as of June 2024.
Mulesing 鈥 the removal of hind skin strips from sheep 鈥 is banned from ZQ Merino suppliers. The practice was outlawed in New Zealand in 2018.
New Zealand had approximately 23.59 million sheep as of June 2024 鈥 around 3 million of which are merino 鈥 and after peaking in the 1980s.
Merino wool is high-value, fine and soft with moisture-wicking and antibacterial properties, and New Zealand merino is used by apparel companies such as Icebreaker and Untouched World.
Barrister and award-winning shearer Jills Angus Burney is 鈥渘ot surprised鈥 that Peta has targeted New Zealand sheep shearers because it earlier did a similar expos茅 in Australia.
She believes the industry鈥檚 standards have improved drastically over recent decades and are higher than ever before.
鈥淭he merino industry is hugely watchful of ethical standards,鈥 she told the Herald. 鈥淚 can assure you, and you can assure your readers, that when we teach people to shear sheep, we teach people to shear so that they are handling the animals with care.鈥
Farmers were 鈥渞eally, really trying to do the best thing鈥 and she thinks ZQ Merino is 鈥渁bsolutely ethical鈥.
Due to the nature of the shearing process, nicks do happen she said.
Merino sheep, which have three times as many capillaries as British breeds, bleed more 鈥 as visible in Peta鈥檚 footage.
Angus Burney said the organisation鈥檚 approach was 鈥渃herry-picking鈥 its findings. A minority of shearers could be 鈥渞ough鈥 or do a 鈥渂ad job鈥, which was for shearing contractors to deal with.
She said the people who shot the footage shared by Peta should have reported what they saw immediately.
鈥淭hey were in those wool sheds, they have a fiduciary duty to raise their concerns in the first instance with the owners of the stock,鈥 she said. 鈥淩aised the footage and the complaints with the contractors, with the employers, with the gangs, with the team leaders, the shearing contractors and the relative farmers.鈥
She said there was no place for deliberate violence in the New Zealand wool industry.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e in the woolshed when that鈥檚 happening, you have an absolute duty to report it.鈥
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