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MINK

Mink farm attacked by animal rights group

Around 50 protesters broke into a mink farm in Tomelilla in southern Sweden on Saturday afternoon, interfering with cages and disturbing the mating minks.

“They shook the cages to bother and scare the minks who are at the moment busy in the mating season and also harassed the farmer,” said Peter Martinsson at Skåne police to the TT news agency.

The protest is reported to have been carried out by the animal rights group Djurrättsalliansen, an activist group that seeks the closure of the six remaining mink farms in the region.

The group have however flatly denied that they took part in the attack and the allegations of harassment by the farmer.

The attack comes shortly after a farmer in Skaraborg was threatened with an axe when he submitted an application to open a mink farm.

Djurrättsalliansen declared on its homepage that “the struggle to close Skåne’s six remaining mink farms continues” and has a post celebrating the closure of a farm in Svedala.

The group argued that the “time for talk is over” and that the animals need treatment, calling for end to the fur industry in Sweden.

“The fur industry has had over 20 years to conform to animal protection legislation and study after study has shown that they haven’t addressed the animals’ serious behavioural problems,” the group claimed.

TT/The Local/pvs

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MINK

Denmark begins exhumation of four million mink carcasses

The first of the mink carcasses buried after last autumn’s mass cull have been dug up for incineration.

Denmark begins exhumation of four million mink carcasses
The exhumation of the minks began at 4am on Thursday. Photo: Mikkel Berg Pedersen/Ritzau Scanpix

The so-called “test exhumation” began at Nørre Felding, south of Holsterbro at 4am on Thursday morning. The carcasses will be incinerated at one of the 13 waste facilities that have submitted bids for the task, some at Amager, some at Sønderborg, and others to Hjørring in the north.

Citizens in the areas near the mink burial sites have been warned in advance that they may be exposed to bad smells when the decomposed carcasses are brought to the surface.

“I regret that this will cause some noise and some smell, but I think the residents would rather have this for a short period, and then know that the problem is solved and the risk of pollution eliminated, than have to live with the uncertainty for many years going forward,” said Rasmus Prehn, Denmark’s agriculture minister, in a statement.

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But the broadcaster’s reporter Svend Vilhelm Mikkelsen said that the smell was minimal. “You can smell it clearly when the truck carrying the minks drives by, but it’s peanuts compared to standing in a pigsty,” he said.

The dig at Nørre Felding, a military area in northern Zealand, will be used to assess the condition of the minks after six months buried under soil and lime, before quickly moving on to the full-scale exhumation. 

Prehn told Ritzau that Denmark had selected a public holiday, Ascension or Kristi Himmelfartsdag, to speed up the process. 

“If we are to achieve this as soon as possible, before the weather becomes so warm that we risk further odor nuisances, then now is the time to strike. On a public holiday, everything else being equal, there is also less traffic on the roads, so you can reach the incineration plant more quickly.”

The plan is for all the animal carcasses to be dug up and incinerated by mid-July.

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