• Victory! County Bans Elephant Performances

    Written by Michelle Kretzer

    With support from PETA and local PETA members and hard work by local animal rights group Alliance for Animals, which initiated the proposal, the Dane County, Wisconsin, Board of Supervisors has enacted a ban on elephant performances at all county-owned facilities.


    James Preston
    |cc by 2.0

    PETA members and members of local animal rights group Alliance for Animals had written to and called the local board to ask for the ban, attended supervisors' meetings to speak in favor of it, and garnered support from the community. It took only six months for the efforts to pay off.

    The supervisor who proposed the ban, Al Matano, stated:

    Elephants don't belong in trucks, they don't belong in circuses, and we decided as a county [in 2000] not to keep them at our zoo, because we weren't able to house them humanely. So having them at our expo center makes no sense. It's not possible to have elephants in a traveling show and treat them carefully enough.

    For help getting a similar ban passed in your community, contact PETA's Action Team

  • Circus's Elephants Kept Out of Maine

    Written by Michelle Kretzer

    When he learned that Topsy, an elephant used by Piccadilly Circus, tested positive in two tuberculosis (TB) screening tests, Maine's state veterinarian, Don Hoenig, barred the circus from taking her into the state. Since Piccadilly didn't want its other elephant, Annette, to perform without Topsy, neither elephant will be forced to perform in Maine.


    Elephants such as this one are in danger of suffering the same fate as Topsy

    Hoenig is adhering to the 2012 Guidelines for the Control of Tuberculosis in Elephants recommended by the United States Animal Health Association (USAHA), which aims to prevent, control, and eliminate disease. The USAHA recommends that elephants who test positive for TB should be restricted from all travel or public contact for a year since the disease is highly transmissible to humans, even without direct contact. PETA has repeatedly urged state and local health departments to protect the public when circuses are in town by prohibiting the exhibition of elephants who have reactive TB screening tests.

    Elephants used by circuses have a heightened risk of developing active TB infections because their health is compromised by the constant stress of traveling inside filthy, poorly ventilated boxcars. They are also chained for up to 100 hours at a time and forced to perform unnatural and sometimes painful tricks. Multiple elephants used by Ringling Bros. and George Carden Circus have tested positive in TB screening tests but are still being forced to travel and perform.

    Because of the fragile health of TB-positive elephants and the risk to the public, PETA has repeatedly asked the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to make adherence to the USAHA guidelines a national requirement. The USDA even announced its intention to do so, but it has yet to act.

    Please e-mail the USDA and ask it to protect elephants and the public from circus owners who sacrifice safety for profit.

  • Elephants Never Forget—Even in Polski

    Written by Jeff Mackey

     

    Thanks to many, many kind people around the world, PETA's campaigns often reach even farther than the group's "official" campaigners can, as we were reminded when we came across this picture of a mural that someone had created in Szczecin, Poland, based on peta2's "Elephants Never Forget" campaign. In any language, the image of the bullhook and the sad, wounded elephant get the message across that circuses with captive animals abuse and beat them, so they're no place for pachyderms—or people who care about animals. Please join the worldwide movement to end circus cruelty today.

REPORT CRUELTY

If you have a general question for PETA and would like a response, please e-mail Info@peta.org. If you need to report cruelty to an animal, please click here. If you are reporting an animal in imminent danger and know where to find the animal and if the abuse is taking place right now, please call your local police department. If the police are unresponsive, please call PETA immediately at 757-622-7382 and press 2. 

PETA Tweets

Follow PETA on Twitter!

Chicken Photo: © Rommel Manuel