EU Court backs ban on animal slaughter without stunning.

A Belgian ban on kosher and halal slaughter of animals without being stunned has been backed by the European Court of Justice, which rejected objections by religious groups.

The EU’s highest Court backed a Flemish decision to require the use of stunning for livestock on animal rights grounds. The animal is not killed during the stunning process.

The European Court said all member states had to reconcile both animal welfare and freedom of religion and EU law did not prevent countries from requiring the stunning of animals as long as they respected fundamental rights.

While the Court accepted that imposing such a requirement limited the rights of Muslims and Jews, it did not ban ritual slaughter and the Belgian law’s “interference with freedom of manifest religion” met an “objective of general interest recognised by the European Union, namely the promotion of animal welfare.”

It also said the Flemish Parliament had relied on scientific evidence indicating that prior stunning was the best way of reducing an animal’s suffering and that the law allowed “a fair balance to be struck” between animal welfare and freedom of religion.

The Flanders government in Northern Belgium hailed the decision, with nationalist animal welfare minister Ben Weyts saying “we’re today writing history.” Animal rights group Gaia said it was a great day and the culmination of a 25 year struggle.

The ruling came as a surprise as it went contrary to a recommendation in September to quash the Flemish law by the Court’s Advocate General, who said stricter animal welfare rules were allowed if the “core:” religious practice was not encroached upon.

However, the decision has been met with some criticism, with the head of the conference of European rabbis saying that the ruling would be felt by Jewish communities across Europe. Chief Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt said: -

“The decision goes even further than expected and flies in the fact of recent statements from the European institutions that Jewish life is to be treasured and respected.”

Under the requirements of Muslim halal slaughter or Jewish shechita, an animal’s throat is slit quickly with a surgically sharp knife while it is still conscious.

EU law, along with UK law, already requires animals to be stunned before being killed, unless the meat is intended for Muslims or Jews, and then only in approved abbatoirs.

Main Source: Reuters

Press Release of the European Court of Justice here