• Home
  • Info
    • Links
    • The Industry
    • Memes
    • Investigations Fact Sheet
    • Investigation Videos
    • Ten interesting facts
    • Birth in a farrowing crate
    • Happy Pigs
    • Gallery >
      • Rally 8 June 2013
      • Rally 2 March 2013
      • Rally 16 December 2012
      • Rally August 2016
  • MPS Videos
  • Events
    • Our next event
    • Past Events
  • Blog
    • Open Letters
    • Pig Cruelty with Curtis and Coles
    • Some thoughts on "The truth about pig farms"
    • The plight of pigs: Oliver’s Piggery, Tasmania
    • Creating peace and goodwill for animals at Christmas
    • Thank you for supporting MPS in 2013
    • More horrors from Australian piggeries
    • Miss Bacon Busters 2013
    • Pigs leaping to freedom
    • Ag-gag: when a gag is not a joke
    • Pig meat and cancer
    • When does "cruel" not mean "cruel"?
    • Western Australian Pig Cruelty
    • Grong Grong Horror
    • Animals rights: Power v. Justice
    • Is helping the helpless a crime?
    • Open letter to Jaala Pulford
    • Animals and the decay of public language
    • Searching for intelligence and compassion in Australia
    • Righting legislative wrongs
    • Is a key animal rights message missing?
    • Action at La Luna Bistro suckling piglet sitting 25 March 2018
    • Is your body a graveyard?
  • Donate & Buy
    • T-shirts and Hoodies
    • Donate - General
  • Contact
Melbourne Pig Save
Follow us

Pigs leaping to freedom

15/6/2014

3 Comments

 
In what seems to be an amazing coincidence, two pigs have leapt to freedom from trucks on the way to the slaughterhouse, one in the Guangxi region of China and the other in South America (precise location unknown).

Both events have been reported on UK websites; the Chinese event on Metro (9th June, 2014) and the other on the Daily Mail (13th June, 2014).

Here's a video of the South American event:

Both pigs appear to have avoided serious injury. For both, this was possibly the first day they had seen sunlight. They may have had some sense of their fate, or simply felt that anything must be better than being confined in what was almost certainly a tightly packed truck.

While it's wonderful that they have
(hopefully) found relative freedom, it's sad that such desperate measures were required in order to achieve a life with comforts (including peace and security) that many humans and companion animals take for granted.


The pig in China has been adopted by local police. A spokesman has said, "she will never be eaten here". The fate of the South American pig is unknown.
References:

Anon., "Determined pig jumps from moving truck to escape slaughterhouse", Metro, 6th June, 2014, http://metro.co.uk/2014/06/06/pig-escapes-slaughterhouse-truck-in-guangxi-china-4752625/

Whitelocks, S., "This little piggy ain't going to no market: Real-life Babe the pig leaps from a moving truck on his way to the slaughterhouse", Daily Mail, 13th June, 2014, http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2656556/A-real-life-Babe-Brave-pig-leaps-moving-truck-way-slaughterhouse.html
3 Comments
Amanda
15/6/2014 09:39:44 am

This is brilliant! And keep up your amazing efforts x

Reply
Paul Mahony
15/6/2014 11:29:43 pm

Thanks for your support Amanda.

Reply
top rated resume writing services 2018 link
4/9/2018 12:15:40 pm

I can feel http are bliss of the pig who managed to skip his "could have been" fatal fate by making a escape while on his way to slaughter house! This South American pig seems to have the brain and idea of a human, that's why he managed to do that. It was so clever that even risking his own life by jumping from the truck was the top choice he did that time. Pig also have to live their own lives, and people have to understand that!

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Author

    Paul Mahony, MPS co-founder

    Archives

    June 2014

    Categories

    All
    Animal Rights

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly