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Ingrid Newkirk

Ingrid Newkirk

Posted: March 20, 2011 09:11 PM

Pets Should Be Evacuated, Too


PETA's Ashley Fruno has been working in Sendai and the surrounding areas since the first flight into Tokyo after the tsunami. She is helping people who wouldn't go into shelters there because they can't take their animals and their animals are family to them. Stories of reunions abound. One man let his dog, Shane, out of the house, then ran to warn neighbors of the approaching tsunami. Before Shane's "dad" could return, the wave came crashing in. He feared that Shane was lost forever. A few days ago, Shane showed up, both elbows cut and bruised, at a school he had never been to before: the same school where his guardian was now living.

Most Americans, like most Japanese, view their dogs, cats, and other animal companions as family members, and rightly so. Yet, the U.S. State Department is tearing apart families by forcing U.S. citizens who are evacuating the crises in Japan, Libya, and Bahrain to leave behind their dogs and cats. I thought that we had overcome that callous mindset after the nightmares of children being forcibly separated from their dogs and cats by the National Guard after Hurricane Katrina, but I was wrong.

When riots broke out in Egypt last month, U.S. evacuees faced the agonizing choice between flying home to safety -- which meant leaving their animals to likely suffer and die in a hostile environment, alone and scared -- or staying behind and risking their own lives to remain with their beloved companions. Why would we do that to them? Only after PETA alerted our members and repeatedly urged Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to allow animals on U.S. government-chartered evacuation flights were some animals finally allowed on the last flight out of Egypt -- if they were small enough to fit in a carrier under an airplane seat. Too bad, Lassie, you'd have to eat dirt and dodge petrol bombs.

U.K. citizens fleeing the Middle East and Japan have been allowed to take their animal companions with them on evacuation flights. The U.S. is not so civilized, and that's a blot on our national copybook. Obviously, the Department of State's policy against evacuating animals in crises puts both animals and the people who care about them in peril. In summarizing the lessons learned after the Hurricane Katrina rescue and relief efforts, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stated that "... a lack of plans and resources to evacuate 'incidental' pets with their owners has been known for decades to be a primary reason why citizens will refuse to evacuate in the face of imminent life-threatening danger."

Animals aren't any better equipped to survive an emergency than humans are. Few people missed the fact that after Hurricane Katrina, people died because buses and emergency shelters wouldn't allow their animals. Dogs and cats whose guardians abandoned them, sometimes at gunpoint, to "fend for themselves" slowly wasted away, terrified and delirious from dehydration or reeling from the pain of broken bones and infected wounds. Many once-beloved animals were shot dead in the streets by authorities. PETA's team of rescuers who were in the muck and grime, pried open house doors and padlocked gates only to find, in many cases, animals' carcasses.

It was years ago that we first heard a president talk about a kinder, gentler nation, so why would it still be just that -- talk? Isn't it time to protect the most vulnerable members of our citizens' families? We've lived through enough disasters in recent years to know the devastation that results when evacuation policies force family members apart. It's time for the State Department to permanently change its official policy to allow all members of U.S. citizens' families -- no matter what size they are or how many legs they have -- to evacuate together when disaster strikes. Please, contact the State Department and raise hell.

 
 
 
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10:40 AM on 03/26/2011
I completely disagree with evacuating pets at taxpayer expense in a disaster situation. In most cases there is little time to work with, there is total chaos, and space is limited. Has anyone ever thought of the numbers of people on those evacuation flights who are allergic to animals? To pack them into crowded flights with numerous animals could be deadly. Additionally, most evacuation flights don't arrive in the U.S., most take people to the nearest country where the evacuees can make their own onward travel arrangements. So now the State Department would have to deal with the issues of bringing animals into a third country that may have quarantine requirements, if they allow the entry of animals at all! I say if people want to evacuate with their pets they or PETA should be responsible for making private arrangements for them to do so. PETA can charter evacuation flights just like the State Department charters them. Has anyone considered that. I for one would not want to be evacuated in Noah's arch and I certainly wouldn't want taxpayers footing the bill for it. I know this will ruffle a lot of feathers, but it needs to be known that not everyone is against the State Department's policy and I hope it never changes. Lastly, if it is true that animals were allowed on the last flight out of Libya, shame on the State Department for violating regulations.
12:35 PM on 03/25/2011
PETA has absolutely no credibility among those who care about animals while also caring about human society equally. Their extremism in so many areas just does not allow one to hear their messages with an open mind.

In the United States, we have passed laws (PETS Act) and created mechanisms and organizations (NASAAEP, NARSC and in each individual state) to address the needs of pets displaced along with evacuated owners. PETA has had absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with that process.

In the case of an evacuation of US nationals from a foreign nation descending into chaos, it is a wiser course to not second guess authorities while the disaster is ongoing., as this article does. Human life must be put ahead of animal life in such circumstances. It is also disingenuous to use events such as national disasters or revolutions to gain publicity or seek fund-raising opportunity.

The right question is not "What has Ashley Fruno" accomplished in Japan?" but rather "Was she asked to help by an official agency request, or did she self-deploy?" If it was the latter, shame on her and shame on PETA.
10:41 AM on 03/24/2011
I really love my cats, just a little pain felt by my cat would make me very sad, so i can imagine if one day a disaster happen in my hometown, I would not leave them. I really hope the State Department to change its policy soon. However, I think, we do not have enough reason to leave our pets in the midst of disaster. Animals also deserve rescue efforts when disaster strikes.
12:07 PM on 03/22/2011
I'm sorry, but this can't be an all or nothing issue. I'm all for the State Department to start including plans for the evacuation of pets in cases like Japan where it's not an immediate, life-or-death crisis. So when time and resources allow, sure.

But with something like Katrina? Or in the case of violent civil unrest? Cases where large numbers of people need to be evacuated as quickly as possible with the limited resources available. Absolutely not. I realize this is where I lose most of you, but when it comes down to choosing whether to save a human life or the life of a pet, there is no question; it has to be the human life.
08:05 AM on 03/22/2011
To leave one's beloved companion behind is unthinkable. Animals don't understand what has happened or why their world has been turned upside down. These draconian policies must be revised. Animals need to be protected and that means they need to stay with their guardians.
01:29 AM on 03/22/2011
I would not leave my pets behind; they're like family. And it's time the governments of all countries realized this; that animals mean just as much to people as other humans. Animals must be evacuated with their humans; it's the right thing to do, full stop!
12:19 AM on 03/22/2011
I couldn't agree more - companion animals are members of the family just as much as human relatives. Think of the elderly who are often lonely and whose only companion is an animal or children whom are often given pets to learn about how to 'love, care and be responsible for others' - what message do we send when we are suddenly told to abandon our furry families in the name of 'personal safety?' What about the personal safety of those companion animals who trust us, love us and have such value in our lives? In crisis situations, I couldn't care less if the plane was chockablock full of animals, people - anything that lives and breathes - we ALL deserve the right to safety and to be with our families, no matter who or what we are.
12:00 AM on 03/22/2011
Why is it that the heartless are the ones who make it to positions of 'authority' to make these backward rules which cause so much suffering?
08:48 PM on 03/21/2011
Onica Jessip, if you are told to evacuate, you must insist on bringing Brownie. Don't take no for an answer! If all else fails, contact us right away and we will help you. You can e-mail info@peta.org, and contact me directly at TeresaC@peta.org. We also have an after-hours emergency phone number posted at peta.org (under Contact). Thank you for your service!
12:11 AM on 03/22/2011
Congratulations Peta, you are doing a wonderful job. For those of us who can't be with you over there, you have our moral support. Our hearts are with you as we closely follow what's happening. So many animals would have perished in a sad and miserable death if not for you.
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05:44 PM on 03/21/2011
I had a friend who drowned in Katrina because he stayed home to take care of his numerous pets. This is definitely an important issue that must be acknowledged. People will risk their lives when it comes to their animals. There needs to be some way to accomodate them as well.
05:11 PM on 03/21/2011
Thank you PETA. My wife just heard about this and posted it on her blog. I'm serving in Japan and have a dog named Brownie. I just don't know what I'm going to do if I'm told I need to evacuate.
08:35 AM on 03/22/2011
Onica Jessip, if you are told to evacuate, you must insist on bringing Brownie. Don't take no for an answer! If all else fails, contact us right away and we will help you. You can e-mail info@peta.­org, and contact me directly at TeresaC@pe­ta.org. We also have an after-hour­s emergency phone number posted at peta.org (under Contact). Thank you for your service!
04:20 PM on 03/21/2011
Well, well. I though PETA types did not approve of 'pets'. Now this piece sees them as part of families. I guess the focus groups have spoken loud and clear.
12:07 AM on 03/22/2011
And what are you and your 'types' doing to save animals, anything at all, or are you just another armchair nay-sayer?
02:05 PM on 03/21/2011
Amen. I can't believe this is still an issue!
11:44 AM on 03/21/2011
Gandhi's famous quote- “The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated” points to our nation's lack of moral progress where animals are involved. As Ingrid pointed out, to not have learned and changed policy after the devastating disaster in New Orleans is a disgrace and it definitely puts more humans at risk because they cannot abandon their pets. To many of us, that is a Sophie's choice that shouldn't be. The state department has failed these people and their pets and needs to become more pet-friendly!
11:31 AM on 03/21/2011
This is such an excellent, and too often overlooked, point about before-disaster and after-disaster evacuations. It not only endangers the lives of companion animals but also those of their human guardians--because many people, when faced with the excrutiating decision between staying and having to leave without their animals, will choose to stay.

I hope the State Department heeds this call to change its policies to prevent future deaths.