An incredible scandal occurred in South Africa. Since the abolition of Apartheid and the take over of power by the Negro majority, this erstwhile rich country has been increasingly quibbling, rushing to the rank of Bantian from the "third world". This time it happened there the poultry farming scandal.
Black people working in poultry farms left their jobs after the state-owned poultry company (the equivalent of our PGR) did not transfer funds to pay for workers and feed the birds. Animal protection officers faced the gruesome task of hand-killing more than 350,000 declared chickens. Earlier, animals began killing each another and eating each other.
The National Council of Associations for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, or the NSPCA, informed that it was incapable to find precisely how many chickens had died before its officers reached neglected poultry farms due to the "mass cannibalism" that occurred among birds. The organization, on the another hand, reported that it managed to save more than 500,000 chickens.
"It was a shocking sight. Thirsty chickens crowded together, chickens eating each other, feeding lines stripped of food’ – is given in a message to the press.
Chickens belonged to Daybreak Foods, a large poultry supplier owned by the South African State Treasury Company Public Investment Corp.
NSPCA officers were first notified of the crisis at 1 of the farms on 30 April. The organization discovered at least 5 another farms in the northern part of South Africa, where the birds were left to die hungry after the fodder ran out, and the musrins working there returned home after a prostuity due to the fact that their wages were not paid.
Nokwazi Ngcongo's spokesperson told the regular Maverick news service that birds had not been fed for any time due to financial problems that affected feed delivery. She said efforts were made to reduce the suffering of animals as much as possible.
According to the NSPCA, chickens have not been fed for over a week. The organisation has committed itself to initiating legal proceedings against Daybreak Foods, citing animal protection rules, for failing its duties. The South African government has reported that it talks with the management of Daybreak Foods on the company's financial problems.
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