In September last year, a new UK law was passed to prevent travel companies from promoting and selling tickets, in England and Northern Ireland, to tourist attractions abroad where animals suffer and where welfare standards are considered unacceptable.
The Animals (Low-Welfare Activities Abroad) Act was a world-first, and whilst we celebrated this - we were disappointed that the previous government failed to specify a list of activities that do not meet these standards, and are therefore banned under the law. This means that the law’s parameters are unclear, and its enforcement completely impossible.
A new opinion poll commissioned by Animals Asia indicates that the new law lacks effectiveness unless the UK Government specifies the particular activities that should be prohibited.
The poll revealed that:
[Fieldwork for this research was conducted by Opinium Research from April 26th to April 30th, 2024. The sample size comprised 2,000 UK adults and the results were weighted to ensure that results are nationally representative]
For more information about the survey, please read our Press Release.
You can help stop cruel tourist attractions abroad. Join our campaign supporters: Ricky Gervais, Chris Packham, Stephen Fry and Alan Cumming in the fight against cruelty to animals in the name of entertainment.
We’re calling on UK residents to sign our petition for clarification from the new government around which tourist attractions will be banned from being sold and promoted under this law. Additionally, you can also report any animal cruelty that you may have witnessed while abroad after September 2023, by emailing us on [email protected].
By adding your voice, you help us provide vital evidence to present to and put pressure on the newly elected UK government to effectively implement the law that could - and should - be helping to save countless animals from suffering.
By signing the petition, you will be supporting our call for a list of prohibited activities that will be included under the recently passed law. This will mean it can actually be enforced, and make the positive difference to animals that was originally intended.
We welcome ABTA's list of unacceptable activities, and in addition would like to see the inclusion of dolphin parks, circus performances, elephant rides, civet coffee farms, cockfighting, and horse drawn carriages – all of which in some way deprive the animal of natural behaviours, require caging or restraint, and involve subjecting them to handling or stressful encounters.
You must be a UK resident to sign the petition for presentation to the UK government but you can still help animals used in tourism from anywhere in the world.
You can find out more about our work to end the suffering of animals at tourist attractions across Asia through our Captive Animal Welfare program.