Little piggies go to market, but in Germany they also go to court.
In a legal first, animal rights advocates have asked Germany’s top court to ban the practice of castrating young male pigs without anesthetic — with the piglets themselves listed as the plaintiffs.
The painful procedure has become increasingly controversial in Europe and has been banned in Sweden, Norway and Switzerland.
Photo: AFP
Farmers argue that the castration of piglets a few days after birth is necessary to prevent “boar taint,” the occasional occurrence of a foul smell when cooking pork from male pigs past puberty.
The German Bundestag in 2013 outlawed castration without pain relief, but it offered farmers a five-year transition period to help them adapt to the change — a timeline that was last year extended until 2021.
Outraged by the inaction, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) last month filed a lawsuit with Germany’s Constitutional Court on behalf of the baby pigs.
The group wants judges to recognize that pigs have rights similar to humans and that these are being violated by the “cruel act” of castration without pain relief.
“Non-human entities like companies and associations have legal personhood. So why not animals too?” said lawyer Cornelia Ziehm, who is supporting PETA in representing the piglets in court.
PETA argues that under German law, animals cannot be harmed without reasonable explanation.
“The castration of piglets — with or without anesthesia — is in clear violation of this, giving Germany’s male piglets only one option: to sue for the enforcement of their rights in court,” the group said in a statement.
The crux of the case is their argument that in Germany “everyone” (jedermann) can file a constitutional complaint if they believe their basic rights have been violated — even a pig.
However, Jens Buelte, a law professor at University of Mannheim, doubted whether the judges in Karlsruhe would see it the same way.
“Animals do not have their own rights under German law,” he said, giving PETA’s lawsuit “little chance of succeeding.”
It is not the first time campaign groups have filed a case on behalf of animals.
PETA made global headlines in 2015 when it asked a US court to grant a macaque the copyright to a selfie it snapped on a wildlife photographer’s camera.
The picture of the broadly grinning monkey went viral, but the court eventually ruled that animals cannot bring copyright infringement suits.
PETA condemned the verdict, saying that the monkey was “discriminated against simply because he’s a nonhuman animal.”
However, in Argentina in 2016 a judge ordered Cecilia the chimpanzee to be released from Mendoza Zoo after agreeing with advocates that she was entitled to basic rights and her solitary confinement was unlawful.
German farmers, who remove testicles from about 20 million piglets each year, have long resisted the push to end castration without anesthesia.
They say there is a lack of workable alternatives to tackle boar taint, in an industry already struggling with fierce foreign competition.
Local anesthesia and gene editing are not yet viable or too expensive, they said, and would raise the cost of pork in a country famous for its love of schnitzel and sausage.
The government late last year agreed to give the farmers a final two-year extension before the ban takes effect — a decision decried by the opposition Greens and far-left Die Linke, which argued that it put the interests of the meat industry above animal protection.
Some German pork producers are pinning their hopes on a vaccine that requires just two injections to prevent boar taint — already a popular alternative abroad.
A pilot project involving 100,000 German piglets is ongoing, although critics have said the vaccines are costly too.
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