This is the power issue we are concerned our  government is letting loose 
without better safety guidelines to protect the  farmer.  We can tag and we can 
keep records but the government has to allow  means of rectifying these issues 
[ in advance of a   problem.]

>From warmwell.com-
DEFRA destroys a herd of  cattle in the UK-

>From Private Eye 16th March 2007  Muckspreader
' Until last month David Dobbin, 43, of Backford near  Chester was the 
owner of a 567 strong dairy herd which represented his  entire livelihood. 
Several of his cows had won prizes and the herd's value  was well over half a 
million pounds.

In 2005 DEFRA officials  inspected the voluminous documentation 
required for his cattle under EEC  rules, including "passports" and numbered 
ear 
tags for each animal, and  found what they claimed to be a number of 
unspecified
irregularities.  Instead of discussing how these could be sorted out, 
DEFRA
last  November asked Cheshire Trading Standards officials to seize all 
his  passports, making it illegal for him to remove any animal off his 
farm and  virtually wiping out his income.

Last month the officials removed his  entire herd to another farm 
elsewhere in Cheshire, stating that it was their  intention to destroy all 567
animals. Their authority, they claimed, was an  EC Regulation 494/98, 
issued at the height of the BSE panic. This lays down  that "if the keeper of 
an animal cannot prove its identification within two  working days, it 
shall be destroyed without delay under the supervision of  the veterinary
authorities, and without compensation from the competent  authorities".
Although these powers given to ministry officials were quite  
unprecedented, the regulation only permitted them to destroy animals which  
could not 
be identified. DEFRA has never claimed that the paperwork for most  of Mr
Dobbin's cows was not in order.

Thanks to his  Liverpool lawyers, Kirwans, Mr Dobbin managed to get a 
High Court  injunction, giving his cows a stay of execution less than an 
hour before the  slaughter was due to begin. He also won leave from Mr 
Justice Goldring for a  judicial review on the grounds that DEFRA was acting 
way beyond its legal  powers. But at the beginning of this month DEFRA 
insisted that, unless Mr  Dobbin could prove the identification of every 
single 
one of his cows, they  must still all be destroyed. Since all his cattle
passports - the most  obvious means of identification - had been
confiscated, this was impossible.  The officials said he would instead 
have to provide DNA identification for  each animal within two days, which 
would have been physically impossible -  not least because the cows had all 
been moved to another location which Mr  Dobbin was not allowed access.

On 6 March therefore, the High Court  had no choice but to give DEFRA's
officials permission to proceed with the  slaughter. The need for this 
was particularly urgent, they said, because  they did not have the 
resources to look after or milk the cattle properly,  and this was causing 
severe "animal welfare" problems. When informed of the  judge's decision over 
the 
phone, Mr Dobbin burst into tears and on 7 March  the destruction of his 
cattle 
began. 
All that he can hope for now is  that the judicial review, set for nine
months' time, might at least confirm  that DEFRA acted beyond its 
powers.
But, in the meantime, this is scant  consolation for the sight of his 
entire life and livelihood going up in  smoke just because DEFRA's officials 
have been so zealous in exercising for  the first time powers greater than 
that given to any British officials  before them. For the pleasure of 
ruining a man's life and killing nearly 600  healthy animals, it must be a 
small 
price to pay.  




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